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Soberbia, el séptimo pecado. Serie de siete episodios donde hablaremos y nos divertiremos con cada uno de los pecados capitales, sus demonios y sus virtudes. Con este episodio terminamos la serie completa, te invitamos a que escuches los demás episodios y que nos sigas y suscribas Suscríbete y síguenos en: Facebook Instargram YouTube Spotify Radio Public Anchor Breaker Pocket Casts Google Podcast Overcast #entretenimiento #anchor #podcastenespañol #podcast #spotify #loquehayyloquesuena #charla #reflexion #cultura #sociedad #crítica #radiopublic #Braker #PockeCasts #goooglepodcast #soberbia #pecado #pecadoscapitales
Envidia, el sexto de los siete pecados capitales. Serie de siete episodios donde hablaremos y nos divertiremos con cada uno de los pecados capitales, sus demonios y sus virtudes. Suscríbete y síguenos en: Facebook Instargram YouTube Spotify Radio Public Anchor Breaker Pocket Casts Google Podcast Overcast #entretenimiento #anchor #podcastenespañol #podcast #spotify #loquehayyloquesuena #charla #reflexion #cultura #sociedad #crítica #radiopublic #Braker #PockeCasts #goooglepodcast #envidia #pecado #pecadoscapitales
Ira, el quito de los siete pecados capitales. Serie de siete episodios donde hablaremos y nos divertiremos con cada uno de los pecados capitales, sus demonios y sus virtudes. Suscríbete y síguenos en: Facebook Instargram YouTube Spotify Radio Public Anchor Breaker Pocket Casts Google Podcast Overcast #entretenimiento #anchor #podcastenespañol #podcast #spotify #loquehayyloquesuena #charla #reflexion #cultura #sociedad #crítica #radiopublic #Braker #PockeCasts #goooglepodcast #avaricia #pecado #pecadoscapitales #ira
Ob noch mehr als nur das Intro von der neuen Netflix Serie „Dragons Dogma“ überzeugen kann, welche Faszination Daniel für Drachen besitzt und wie viele Texturen die Objekte haben, erfahrt ihr in dieser Ausgabe. Peccatum mortiferum!
Pereza, el cuarto de los siete pecados capitales. Serie de siete episodios donde hablaremos y nos divertiremos con cada uno de los pecados capitales, sus demonios y sus virtudes. Suscríbete y síguenos en: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/loquehayyloquesuena Instargram: https://www.instagram.com/hayysuena/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVoZRtIHQRaVeBEm4wpLe4g Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5t3dxeIYw17UnUQpq8M0px Radio Public: https://radiopublic.com/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena-uprm-GMV95R/episodes Anchor: https://anchor.fm/hayysuena Breaker: https://www.breaker.audio/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena-uprm Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/i41gywok Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8yMjBhOThiOC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw?ved=0CAIQ7dUFahcKEwigkbO8ic3qAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQBw Overcast: https://overcast.fm/itunes1522951877/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena #entretenimiento #anchor #podcastenespañol #podcast #spotify #loquehayyloquesuena #charla #reflexion #cultura #sociedad #crítica #radiopublic #Braker #PockeCasts #goooglepodcast #avaricia #pecado #pecadoscapitales #pereza #flojera #hueva
Avaricia, el tercer de los siete pecados capitales. Serie de siete episodios donde hablaremos y nos divertiremos con cada uno de los pecados capitales, sus demonios y sus virtudes. Suscríbete y síguenos en: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/loquehayyloquesuena Instargram: https://www.instagram.com/hayysuena/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVoZRtIHQRaVeBEm4wpLe4g Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5t3dxeIYw17UnUQpq8M0px Radio Public: https://radiopublic.com/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena-uprm-GMV95R/episodes Anchor: https://anchor.fm/hayysuena Breaker: https://www.breaker.audio/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena-uprm Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/i41gywok Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8yMjBhOThiOC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw?ved=0CAIQ7dUFahcKEwigkbO8ic3qAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQBw Overcast: https://overcast.fm/itunes1522951877/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena #entretenimiento #anchor #podcastenespañol #podcast #spotify #loquehayyloquesuena #charla #reflexion #cultura #sociedad #crítica #radiopublic #Braker #PockeCasts #goooglepodcast #avaricia #pecado #pecadoscapitales
Gula, el segundo de los siete pecados capitales. Serie de siete episodios donde hablaremos y nos divertiremos con cada uno de los pecados capitales, sus demonios y sus virtudes. Suscríbete y síguenos en: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/loquehayyloquesuena Instargram: https://www.instagram.com/hayysuena/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVoZRtIHQRaVeBEm4wpLe4g Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5t3dxeIYw17UnUQpq8M0px Radio Public: https://radiopublic.com/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena-uprm-GMV95R/episodes Anchor: https://anchor.fm/hayysuena Breaker: https://www.breaker.audio/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena-uprm Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/i41gywok Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8yMjBhOThiOC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw?ved=0CAIQ7dUFahcKEwigkbO8ic3qAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQBw Overcast: https://overcast.fm/itunes1522951877/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena #entretenimiento #anchor #podcastenespañol #podcast #spotify #loquehayyloquesuena #charla #reflexion #cultura #sociedad #crítica #radiopublic #Braker #PockeCasts #goooglepodcast #gula #pecado #pecadoscapitales
Lujuria, el primero de los siete pecados capitales. Serie de siete episodios donde hablaremos y nos divertiremos con cada uno de los pecados capitales, sus demonios y sus virtudes. Suscríbete y síguenos en: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/loquehayyloquesuena Instargram: https://www.instagram.com/hayysuena/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVoZRtIHQRaVeBEm4wpLe4g Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5t3dxeIYw17UnUQpq8M0px Radio Public: https://radiopublic.com/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena-uprm-GMV95R/episodes Anchor: https://anchor.fm/hayysuena Breaker: https://www.breaker.audio/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena-uprm Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/i41gywok Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8yMjBhOThiOC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw?ved=0CAIQ7dUFahcKEwigkbO8ic3qAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQBw Overcast: https://overcast.fm/itunes1522951877/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena #entretenimiento #anchor #podcastenespañol #podcast #spotify #loquehayyloquesuena #charla #reflexion #cultura #sociedad #crítica #radiopublic #Braker #PockeCasts #goooglepodcast #lujuria #pecado #pecadoscapitales
Los invitamos a que nos sigan con la serie de "Los siete pecados capitales" comenzando con la LUJURIA! Suscríbete y síguenos en: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/loquehayyloquesuena Instargram: https://www.instagram.com/hayysuena/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVoZRtIHQRaVeBEm4wpLe4g Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5t3dxeIYw17UnUQpq8M0px Radio Public: https://radiopublic.com/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena-uprm-GMV95R/episodes Anchor: https://anchor.fm/hayysuena Breaker: https://www.breaker.audio/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena-uprm Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/i41gywok Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8yMjBhOThiOC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw?ved=0CAIQ7dUFahcKEwigkbO8ic3qAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQBw Overcast: https://overcast.fm/itunes1522951877/lo-que-hay-y-lo-que-suena #entretenimiento #anchor #podcastenespañol #podcast #spotify #loquehayyloquesuena #charla #reflexion #cultura #sociedad #crítica #radiopublic #Braker #PockeCasts #goooglepodcast #lujuria #pecados #pecadoscapitales
TESTO DELL'ARTICOLO ➜http://www.bastabugie.it/it/articoli.php?id= 6048COME SAN CARLO BORROMEO AFFRONTO' CON FEDE L'EPIDEMIA DEL SUO TEMPO di Roberto de MatteiSan Carlo Borromeo (1538-1584), cardinale di Santa Romana Chiesa e arcivescovo di Milano dal 1565 al 1583, fu definito, nel decreto di canonizzazione, come «un uomo che, mentre il mondo gli sorride con le maggiori blandizie, vive crocifisso al mondo, vive dello spirito, calpestando le cose terrene, cercando continuamente le celesti, emulo in terra, nei pensieri e nelle opere, della vita degli Angeli» (Paolo V, Bolla « Unigenitus » del 1 Nov. 1610). La devozione agli angeli accompagnò la vita di san Carlo, che il conte di Olivares, Enrique de Guzmán, ambasciatore di Filippo II a Roma, definiva «più angelo che uomo» (Giovanni Pietro Giussano, Vita di San Carlo Borromeo, Stamperia della Camera Apostolica, Roma 1610, p. 441). Molti artisti, come Teodoro Vallonio a Palermo e Sebastien Bourdon a Fabriano, hanno raffigurato nei loro dipinti Carlo Borromeo mentre contempla un angelo che ripone nel fodero la spada insanguinata per indicare la cessazione della terribile peste del 1576. Tutto era iniziato nel mese di agosto di quell'anno. Milano era in festa per accogliere don Giovanni d'Austria, di passaggio sulla via delle Fiandre, di cui era stato nominato governatore. Le autorità cittadine erano in fermento per tributare al principe spagnolo i massimi onori, ma Carlo, da sei anni arcivescovo della diocesi, seguiva con preoccupazione le notizie che giungevano da Trento, da Verona, da Mantova, dove la pestilenza aveva iniziato a mietere vittime. I primi casi scoppiarono a Milano l'11 agosto, proprio mentre vi entrava don Giovanni d'Austria. Il vincitore di Lepanto, seguito dal governatore Antonio de Guzmán y Zuñiga, si allontanò dalla città, mentre Carlo, che si trovava a Lodi per i funerali del vescovo, vi accorse immediatamente. La confusione e la paura regnavano a Milano, e l'arcivescovo si dedicò interamente all'assistenza dei malati, ordinando preghiere pubbliche e private. Dom Prosper Guéranger riassume così la sua inesauribile carità. «In mancanza di autorità locali, organizzò il servizio sanitario, fondò o rinnovò ospedali, cercò denaro e vettovaglie, decretò misure preventive. Soprattutto provvide ad assicurare il soccorso spirituale, l'assistenza ai malati, il seppellimento dei morti, l'amministrazione dei Sacramenti agli abitanti confinati nelle loro case, per misure prudenziali. Senza temere il contagio, pagò di persona, visitando ospedali, guidando le processioni di penitenza, facendosi tutto a tutti come un padre e come un vero pastore» (L'anno liturgico - II. Tempo Pasquale e dopo la Pentecoste, Paoline, Alba 1959, pp. 1245-1248).San Carlo era convinto che l'epidemia fosse «un flagello mandato dal cielo» come castigo dei peccati del popolo e che contro di essa fosse necessario ricorrere ai mezzi spirituali: preghiera e penitenza. Egli rimproverò le autorità civili per aver riposto la loro fiducia nei mezzi umani piuttosto che in quelli divini. «Non avevano essi proibito tutte le riunioni pie, tutte le processioni durante il tempo del Giubileo? Per lui, ne era convinto, erano queste le cause del castigo» (Chanoine Charles Sylvain, Histoire de Saint Charles Borromée, Desclée de Brouwer, Lille 1884, vol. II, p. 135). I magistrati che governavano la città continuavano a opporsi alle cerimonie pubbliche, per timore che l'assembramento di persone potesse dilatare il contagio, ma Carlo, «che era guidato dallo Spirito divino» - racconta un altro biografo - li convinse adducendo diversi esempi, tra cui quello di san Gregorio Magno che aveva fermato la peste che devastava Roma nel 590 (Giussano, op. cit. p. 266). Mentre la pestilenza dilagava, l'arcivescovo ordinò dunque tre processioni generali da svolgersi a Milano il 3, 5 e 6 di ottobre, «per placare l'ira di Dio». Il primo giorno il santo, quantunque non si fosse in tempo di Quaresima, impose le ceneri sul capo delle migliaia di persone riunite, esortando alla penitenza. Finita la cerimonia la processione si recò alla basilica di Sant'Ambrogio. Egli stesso si pose alla testa del popolo, vestito della cappa paonazza, con un cappuccio, a piedi nudi, la corda di penitente al collo e una grande croce in mano. In chiesa predicò sul primo lamento del profeta Geremia "Quomodo sedet sola civitas plena populo", affermando che i peccati del popolo avevano provocato il giusto sdegno di Dio. La seconda processione guidata dal cardinale si diresse alla basilica di San Lorenzo Maggiore. Nel suo sermone egli applicò alla città di Milano il sogno di Nabucodonosor di cui parla Daniele, «mostrando che la vendetta di Dio era venuta sopra di essa» (Giussano, Vita di San Carlo Borromeo, p. 267), Il terzo giorno la processione si diresse dal Duomo alla basilica di Santa Maria presso San Celso. San Carlo portava nelle sue mani la reliquia del Santo chiodo di Nostro Signore, donata dall'imperatore Teodosio a sant'Ambrogio nel V secolo e concluse la cerimonia con un sermone dal titolo: "Peccatum peccavit Jerusalem" (Geremia 1,8). La peste non accennava a diminuire e Milano appariva spopolata, perché un terzo dei cittadini aveva perso la vita e gli altri erano in quarantena o non osavano uscire dalle loro case. L'arcivescovo ordinò che venissero erette nelle principali piazze ed incroci cittadini circa venti colonne in pietra sormontate da una croce per permettere agli abitanti di ogni quartiere di partecipare alle messe e alle preghiere pubbliche affacciandosi alle finestre di casa. Uno dei protettori di Milano era san Sebastiano, il martire a cui erano ricorsi i romani durante la peste dell'anno 672. San Carlo suggerì ai magistrati di Milano di ricostruire il santuario a lui dedicato, che cadeva in rovina, e di celebrare per dieci anni una festa solenne in suo onore. Finalmente nel luglio del 1577 la peste cessò e in settembre fu posta la prima pietra del tempio civico di S. Sebastiano, dove il 20 gennaio di ogni anno ancora oggi si officia una messa per ricordare la fine del flagello.La peste di Milano del 1576 fu ciò che era stato per Roma il sacco dei Lanzichenecchi cinquant'anni prima: un castigo, ma anche un'occasione di purificazione e di conversione. Carlo Borromeo raccolse le sue meditazioni in un Memoriale, in cui scrive tra l'altro: «Città di Milano, la tua grandezza si alzava fino ai cieli, le tue ricchezze si estendevano fino ai confini dell'universo mondo (...) Ecco in un tratto dal Cielo che viene la pestilenza che è la mano di Dio, e in un tratto fu abbassata la tua superbia» (Memoriale al suo diletto popolo della città e diocesi di Milano, Michele Tini, Roma 1579, pp. 28-29). Il santo era convinto che tutto si dovesse alla grande misericordia di Dio: «Egli ha ferito e ha sanato; Egli ha flagellato e ha curato; Egli ha posto mano alla verga del castigo e ha offerto il bastone del sostegno» (Memoriale, p. 81). San Carlo Borromeo morì il 3 novembre del 1584 ed è sepolto nel Duomo di Milano. Il suo cuore fu solennemente traslato a Roma, nella basilica dei Santi Ambrogio e Carlo a via del Corso dove ancora lo si venera. Innumerevoli chiese sono a lui dedicate, tra cui la maestosa Karlskirche di Vienna, costruita nel XVIII secolo come atto votivo dell'imperatore Carlo VI, che aveva affidato la città alla protezione del santo durante la peste del 1713. Durante i suoi diciotto anni di governo della diocesi di Milano, l'arcivescovo Borromeo si dedicò con altrettanto vigore a combattere l'eresia, che considerava la peste dello spirito. Secondo san Carlo, «da nessun'altra colpa è Dio più gravemente offeso, da nessuna provocato a maggiore sdegno quanto dal vizio delle eresie, e che a sua volta nulla può tanto a rovina delle provincie e dei regni quanto può quell'orrida peste» (Conc. Prov. V, Pars I). San Pio X, citando questa sua frase, lo definì «modello del gregge e dei pastori nei tempi moderni, propugnatore e consigliere indefesso della verace riforma cattolica contro quei novatori recenti, il cui intento non era la reintegrazione, ma piuttosto la deformazione e distruzione della fede e dei costumi» (Enciclica Edita saepe del 26 maggio 1910).
Les rondalles mallorquines i Agatha Christie, protagonistes d'aquest "Entre caixes". "Peccatum", que es pot veure a La Seca Espai Brossa, parla de les rondalles mallorquines que va escriure Moss
¡¡ Genial día para conocer cerveceras nuevas !!Hoy estamos con los chicos de IN PECCATUM CRAFT BEER hacen una cerveza genial y aprendemos muchas cosas sobre el mundo craftbeer en Galicia. Es gente apasionada de la música y si escucháis el podcast sabréis porque. Os deseamos un feliz Miércoles y como siempre os decimos "Con cerveza NO hay tristeza"
¡¡ Genial día para conocer cerveceras nuevas !!Hoy estamos con los chicos de IN PECCATUM CRAFT BEER hacen una cerveza genial y aprendemos muchas cosas sobre el mundo craftbeer en Galicia. Es gente apasionada de la música y si escucháis el podcast sabréis porque. Os deseamos un feliz Miércoles y como siempre os decimos "Con cerveza NO hay tristeza"
Ihsahn should be regarded as the finest songwriter in Metal. His work in Emperor alone was glorious, and his Ihsahn albums continue to astound. The previous album After was his crowning achievement, and now the same can be said for Eremita. I was delighted to have Ihsahn back on the WSCA 106.1 FM airwaves to discuss Eremita, songwriting, the next album, shovels, weddings, balloons... Be sure to stream/download my 2010 interview with Ihsahn: http://bnm.podomatic.com/entry/2010-01-29T13_25_46-08_00 Email/Requests Playlists Black, Death, Speed, Thrash, Doom, Folk, Shred, Power, Prog & Traditional Metal Friday Nights 9pm-1am e.s.t. - WSCA 106.1 FM - Portsmouth, NH USA
I have a very short list of people in music that I must speak with. Ihsahn is on that list. His music has impacted me immensely over the years, from the early days of Emperor, to Peccatum and other projects, to his Ihsahn albums. His third album After is a brilliant work that transcends boundaries, yet does not stray from the Ihsahn aesthetic. An absolute masterpiece. Ihsahn has outdone himself. We spoke for 45 minutes about After, his previous albums, songwriting, Emperor worship, and much more. Our conversation was held in two parts, on January 21st & 26th. Email/Requests: blacknightmeditations@msn.com Playlists: http://wsca.radioactivity.fm/show.html?showoid=1242 BLACK NIGHT MEDITATIONS - A heathenish foray along the shining path. Aural ruminations of Black, Death, Speed, Thrash, Doom, Folk, Shred, Power, Prog & Traditional Metal. Tuesday Nights 10pm-2am e.s.t. - WSCA 106.1 FM - Portsmouth, NH USA - Listen online live @ www.wscafm.org
Edited to add 1/19/10: The follow up to Lightbreaker, called Heartland is coming out soon and true to form, Mark has posted a soundtrack. Check it out!Listen to the interview here!Tell me a little about yourself and your writing.I'm more of a long form writer than a short fiction guy. Farrago's Wainscot serialized my hypertext novel, The Oneiromantic Mosaic of Harry Potemkin, in 2007 (and the expanded edition of it can be found here), and the print arm, Farrago Press, will be putting out the sequel/resolution, Psychobabel, in 2009. In September, my first print novel will be out from Night Shade Books. Entitled Lightbreaker, it is the first part of Codex of Souls, a multi-book romp through Western esoteric thought and occult history in an urban fantasy setting. Both are ambitious projects for the early part of a writer's career, but they seem to be the way my brain wants to tell stories, and I'm going along with it. I'm just a delivery vehicle for the Muse, really. Yes, that's my excuse. Though, honestly, I am at that point in my career when I still have a full-time job, and so I have the luxury of producing material that excites me foremost without necessarily being beholden to market forces. This is the way new writers find their way in, I think, by creating material that is filled with the passionate excess of their naiveté. Or, at least, that's the other excuse I keep using. Tell me about the story that you've created a soundtrack/playlist for.Lightbreaker is divergent from the nominal definition of "urban fantasy." There are no werewolves or vampires, and the magick is based more in actual occult history and practices than Dungeons & Dragons rules. I've never been comfortable with the reliance upon vampires and werewolves as fantasy tropes because their historical definitions don't hold up well in a modern setting. They are predators, really, and we are cattle, and I could never quite world-build them well enough that humanity wouldn't have gotten their shit together and wiped them out. It's a blind spot for me, and I didn't try to make it work. Besides, I'm fascinated with mythology, magico-religious belief structures, and whatever it was that Aleister Crowley was really trying to accomplish with all of his writings. He was either a complete nut or he knew something special, and I think his efforts--like a lot of metaphysical and religious thought--are worth examining. If I can do that while providing an entertaining story with lots of sex and death, then everybody wins. The book itself, in a few words, is the story of a guy, Markham, who has returned to Seattle, searching for a girl, Katarina, who, a decade ago, touched his soul and left it . . . damaged. What he stumbles upon when he gets to town is the girl's new friends, who are playing with very dark magick. These guys are a secretive cabal who are attempting to punch a hole through heaven, and make mischief with what they find. Markham must (to quote the marketing copy) "delve deep into his past, calling on every aspect of his occult training for there to be any hope of a future. But delve he must, for Markham is a veneficus, a spirit thief, the Lightbreaker . . ."Just so everyone has some reference points. I am, after all, about to geek out on a bunch of songs no one has heard in reference to a book no one has read, and I'm going to try to do so without offering spoilers. Yeah, good luck with that, I know. What is your playlist? (Why did you choose these songs?01. "Our Solemn Hour" - Within Temptation02. "Collide" - Detritus03. "Missing Link (Screaming Bird mix)" - Curve04. "Voiceover" - Darrin Verhagen 05. "Acidburn Aesthetic" - Stone Glass Steel06. "." - Darrin Verhagen 07. "Black Star" - Peccatum08. "Lethe" - Detritus09. "Agnus Dei" - Shinjuku Thief10. "Quest" - 302 Acid11. "Greater Than The Sun" - Covenant12. "Shadow Path" - Shinjuku Thief13. "The Great Destroyer" - Nine Inch Nails14. "With Small Shards of Glass" - E.P.A.15. "Uthul Khulture" - Sephiroth16. "Colorless" - Venetian Snares17. "Heaven's Blade" - Coil18. "Procession of Souls" - Shinjuku Thief19. "Shroud (Exordium") - Fields of the Nephilim20. "Straight To The Light" - Fields of the NephilimPlaylist Discussion1. "Our Solemn Hour" Within Temptation (The Heart of Everything)I used to write trailers for my books--big splashy write-ups done in screenplay style where I threw together enough of the high points of the book that I could remember what it was all about six months later, and to give myself a thematic overview of what I was trying to accomplish. For a long time, Carl Orff's "Carmina Burana" and Peter Gabriel's "The Rhythm of the Heat" were my go-to songs for trailers, but "Our Solemn Hour" is much more fitting for Lightbreaker. Especially the first big explosion of sound that kicks everything off. Yes, this is the way the world sounds. 2. "Collide" Detritus (Fractured)The book starts with a bang, and it's chapter four before we even slow down enough to really introduce our characters, which is either going make readers love me for not boring them from the start or piss them off mightily. Detritus' "Collide" is a drum 'n' bass symphonic overture, and meshes nicely with a chase that starts in the woods, runs through a small town, and climaxes on the lower deck of a vehicle ferry.3. "Missing Link (Screaming Bird Mix)" Curve (Blackerthreetrackertwo EP)Toni Halliday's voice has always been something of an obsession for me--both in its husky weariness and its seductive allure. It's the voice of a siren who has grown tired of summoning men to their doom, but she knows no other way to find love. The "Screaming Bird Mix" was done by Trent Reznor (of Nine Inch Nails fame), and he adds a layer of noisy guitars to an already caustic bombast. Markham's search for Katarina is a search for his missing link, and the combination of the relentless claustrophobia of the instrumentation and Toni's voice sums up the psychological history of his quest. 4. "Voiceover" Darrin Verhagen (D/Classified)6. "-" - Darrin Verhagen (Zero-Stung)9. "Agnes Dei" Shinjuku Thief (Medea)12. "Shadow Path" - Shinjuku Thief (The Witch Hunter)18. "Procession of Souls - Shinjuku Thief (The Witch Haven)Darrin Verhagen has a number of pseudonyms, and so his presence on the soundtrack is heavier than it appears at first glance. His choral and orchestral work is superb, and his ability to blend ethnic instrumentation and pure noise anarchy are just the sort of sonic impact I'd love to have in a film. The tracks picked out for the soundtrack are more subdued, but no less powerful. Well, other than the E.P.A. track, but there's no way to soften that blow, really. 5. "Acidburn Aesthetic" Stone Glass Steel (Dismembering Artists) Markham suffers from a bit of schizophrenia via a noise of voices that keep him company, and the "recontextualized" sound of Stone Glass Steel is fitting accompaniment. Phil Easter (SGS) builds his music by sampling and cutting from other works, building something new with elements that trigger other memories and associations in your mind. The mix of industrial noises, dark ambient drones, churning metal guitar, and atmospheric disturbances is schizophrenic enough, and the hints of nearly recognizable riffs from other artists is an added layer of identity confusion 7. "Black Star" Peccatum (Lost in Reverie)This one will be more obvious in retrospect after reading Lightbreaker, but if you read Irhiel (the female voice) as Katarina and Ihsahn (the male voice) as Markham's shadow and the whole song as being told from Markham's view, then it all makes sense. Really. "I am the black star, hostess of your dead heart sun." Some relationships are just doomed, you know, just flat out doomed. 8. "Lethe" Detritus (Fractured) 10. "Quest" 302 Acid (005)These two are mood music, downtempo tracks that try to capture some of the ghostly ambience of the book. The sort of thing you hear as backdrop during one of those rapid-time sequences in CSI where the team makes with the science and solves the crime. You don't want to cut this stuff because it's important to let the audience know that Things Are Being Done, but you certainly don't want it to drag by. A good bassline makes grunt work seem sexier than it really is. 11. "Greater Than The Sun" Covenant (Skyshaper)It's the rolling rhythmic line that really gets me. There are several introspective moments through the book, and the persistent rotation of the world around Markham is mirrored by the looping motion of "Greater Than The Sun." The more I listen to this song, the more I realize it encapsulates Markham's journey through Lightbreaker, right down to the way the bass drops away as Eskil Simonsson sings the chorus, each recitation more fragile and naked than the last. And the title. Yeah, the title is perfect. So, in a nutshell, this is the book. 13. "The Great Destroyer" Nine Inch Nails (Year Zero)Every villain needs a theme song, and this one is probably overly dramatic and heavy-handed, but the sonic breakdown into Autechre beat-fuckery about two minutes into the song is a great aural representation of what happens when you let a guy try to reshape the world in his image. 14. "With Small Shards of Glass" E.P.A. (Black Ice)There is a scene in the book where the phrase "a chattering echo of a thousand knives being sharpened" is used. E.P.A.'s Black Ice is the power electronics CD of Darrin Verhagen's three-part Black | Mass. Yeah, it's an hour of howling, wailing feedback and noise. With subtle variations, of course. And the one "With Small Shards of Glass" seemed about right. 15. "Uthul Khulture" Sephiroth (Draconian Poetry)And, when the world is burning down around you, what do you need? Apocalyptic drums and dark ambient monster noises. The fact that the band is called "Sephiroth" is just a bonus. 16. "Colorless" Venetian Snares (My Downfall) This record is a departure from the drill ‘n' bass that Venetian Snares has been putting out over the last few years, and I think it's a fantastic new facet to his sound. "Colorless" is suffused with melancholy, but it's not quite despair. Not yet. It's mood music for the bleak part of the early morning when your protagonist has to face what he has done, and what he is about to do. "Our hands betray what we have done." 17. "Heaven's Blade" Coil (The Ape of Naples)You can't write a book about magick (with a ‘k') and not have Coil on the soundtrack. That's like showing up to a secret furry convention without a costume. Everyone knows you don't belong. The trick wasn't a Coil song, but WHICH Coil song. The ephemeral fragility of "Heaven's Blade" is well suited for the penultimate scenes of the book. 19. "Shroud (Exordium)" & 20. Straight To The Light" - Fields Of The Nephilim (Mourning Sun) Mourning Sun was on the master playlist for writing the book, and it was always welcome when it showed up on the rotation. "Shroud (Exordium)" and "Straight To The Light," especially (and, really, the first is a long intro to the second). The way the sound builds across the breadth of "Shroud (Exordium)" to that final angelic chorus is just incredible, and I wish--every day--that I had the money to buy an obscenely huge sound system just so I could experience that progression in the bone-shaking way it was meant to be heard. The transition to "Straight To The Light," that opening guitar riff, is the end of the book, that instantaneous cut to black, and if it was up to me, the screen would stay black until the song was over before the credits ran. What does music mean to you? To your writing?It's critical. Both as a means of fueling the muse, and a means of adding texture. We are ultimately responsible for how the words make the scene work, and being able to find music that suits the intent and the impression of a scene enables me to better articulate what I'm trying to do and to find an emotional kicker to the text. Some film directors are more aware of the music than others, and they understand that it's another layer of meaning--much like the lighting and the framing of individual shots--and to poorly execute this layer is to dress the film shabbily. Ridley Scott, with Bladerunner; Michael Mann, with Miami Vice and Heat (really, the whole Miami Vice phenomena came out of marrying sound to visuals); David Lynch, with nearly everything he's done, but especially Twin Peaks; early Eric Serra, with some of Luc Besson's early films (The Big Blue, La Femme Nikita); Peter Gabriel's work for Birdy and The Last Temptation of Christ: these guys have all done great work marrying soundtracks to the visual presentations. When I used to story-storm late at night, I would put on some film filled with eye-candy, turn down the sound, and put the headphones on. Total sensory overload, and every time I'd stop writing in my notebook and look up, my brain would have to parse the music and the visuals. It would always keep me off-balance, always seeing and hearing something not-quite-right but always exciting. Occasionally, I'd find marginalia in my notes that would record songs for scenes, pairings that worked well and left me with the germ of an idea. Music, like film, is communicating via a different sensory avenue than the word, and frankly, we don't steal from it enough. We're happy to heist stylistic tics from other writers, but I don't think we pay enough attention to rhythm (or lack thereof) or visual cues in other media. 5. What kind of music do you like to write to?Writing music is very different from soundtrack music. My primary writing space is the commuter train, and the music serves two functions: propelling me forward and drowning out the constant chatter of the other three people at the small table I'm sitting at. The playlist is noisy, metallic, and operatic: filled with things that are labeled Teutonic Industrial (Rammstein, mostly), Big Broken Beat (Clark, Detritus, Enduser), Rhythmic Noise (Tarmvred, Iszoloscope, Empusae, and Ah Cama-Sotz), Symphonic Metal (Within Temptation, Nightwish, After Forever, Sirena), Tribal Illbient (Monolith, Sephiroth, and This Morn' Omina), Black Metal (Fields of the Nephilim, mostly), and Industrial Angst (Nine Inch Nails, Ministry, Otep, Die Warzau). The current playlist has about 700 songs, and I just let it spin on random. If this story was made into a movie, who would you want to do the soundtrack?Either Darrin Verhagen or David Dando-Moore. Verhagen writes these evocative film scores and dance company soundtracks that are a combination of ambient soundscapes, tribal raves, cataclysmic waves of emotional angst rendered as chaotic noise, and cinematic downtempo stuff. A lot of the first draft of the Lightbreaker soundtrack was huge chunks of his records, under his own name and his various aliases (Shinjuku Thief, Shinjuku Filth, E.P.A.). His work always evokes a lot of imagery and wild scenarios. Dando-Moore records as Detritus, and his latest record, Fractured, is an smashing collection of Big Beat downtempo instrumentals that make Massive Attack look like a bunch of octogenarians noodling around with primitive tape loops. I wish Hollywood would discover him for the next Bond film, as his tracks would add an extra level of aural eroticism and bang 'n' snap to every scene. I just watched Michael Mann's Miami Vice again the other night and was quite taken with how Mann used his soundtrack in place of actual scene sound. Having the right guy providing "mood music" can create an emotional impact of a scene that doesn't require words.Anything else you'd like to say about music and writing/creating?One of the ideas that I've never been able to figure out how to accomplish effectively is a series of novellas and EPs. Writer and musician produce an object that is a story with a soundtrack. You listen to one while you read the other. Brian Evenson did a spoken word disc for Ant-Zen a couple of years ago called Altmann's Tongue. He read from his stories and Xingu Hill and Tamarin made creepy dark ambient noises underneath. It's a very cool disc. But I'd like to separate the two a little more, and have the music be a pure soundtrack to the reading experience, and not marry it quite so closely to the text. Package it all up in an overly thick DVD case (CD on one side, short book on the other, much like the current PC game cases). I think both writer and musician, provided the pairing is good, could find fuel in the creative efforts of the other. That's what it's really about anyway: fuel for the creative engine. Nicolas Chevreux at Ad Noiseam has just made available a PDF magazine to accompany Raoul Sinier's latest record, Brain Kitchen. Formatting aside, it's exactly the marriage of art, word, and sound that I was thinking about. Visit the Brain Kitchen.To learn more about Mark, visit his website.Next week, I interview author Mandy Roth.