-
Posts
4 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Gallery
Everything posted by MissGloom
-
Bleeding Streets
Beyond a doorway to this grim fable
Tears drip down bony, lanky gables
From clouds lurching to black from dim grey
Wilted sunshine shrouded in decayEach drop a voice of a deathly choir
Harmony of spells that conspire
For children of night, girls of the moon
Against the creatures who roam at noonSkirts and dresses blending with despair
Mysterious screaming in the air
Bleeding streets skipped happily upon
Into the shadows, hopelessly goneWritten August 19 2024
-
I'll cast you a spell, a magic where everyone plays dead forever
And after tonight, they'll never remind you~
-
Started reading Nightmares & Fairy Tales by Serena Valentino (<3) I love it so far. It fits right in with all the other early to mid 2000s spooky comics. Creepy doll that brings misfortune, mysterious deaths, vampires, graveyards. Wonderful.
-
First post... I started playing Alice: Madness Returns a couple nights ago. It's very different from the first game so far. I still like it but not as much so far and in a different way. But we shall see how it goes.
Am currently listening to Night Thoughts by Gothica for the first time, a neoclassical darkwave album released in 2000. I like it all right so far. I've become more interested in neoclassical darkwave from things like Diary of Dreams and Violet Tears, which incorporate instruments like piano, organ, and fancy string instruments and stuff. Also the soundtracks of American McGee's Alice and Cossette no Shouzou have influenced me lately toward this direction, especially the former. I like the classical elements because it suggests it's from a time in the past. I like the conception of the Victorian era more than the Medieval period, though, and do not like folk stuff at all.
Last night I listened to Royaume Mélancolique by Dark Sanctuary for the first time and I love that one. I know Dead Can Dance is very popular but I'm hesitant to listen to their neoclassical darkwave stuff because of how they intentionally distanced themselves from being considered gothic. I want music that more leans into it.