Showing posts with label Björk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Björk. Show all posts

Friday, 14 March 2008

1st vision of Björk new music video Wanderlust

Björk - Wanderlust



The video is going to be online on 1st of April, according to our informations...

Monday, 10 March 2008

One More Picture from Björk new video Wanderlust

Björk - Wanderlust (interview and single download)


An interview on the technical aspects of the production.

Making a 3D Music Video for Björk
Constructing a 3D Rig with Silicon Imaging 2K Cameras
Matt Armstrong
November 28, 2007 Source: Studio Daily

For the music video of Björk’s ‘Wanderlust’ the directing duo known as Encyclopedia Pictura, comprising Sean Hellfritsch and Isaiah Saxon, decided to take the bold leap into the world of 3D. And this was not to be a simple 3D project, if there is such a thing, but included shooting miniatures, puppets and live action on greenscreen and then adding CG elements in post. While the video is not due out until February (and thus we cannot show any video clips until then) we spoke to the duo about the 3D process, from constructing the 3D camera rig with a couple of Silicon Imaging 2K MINI cameras, the techniques of shooting 3D, to editing and compositing the 3D images.

How did you get interested in 3D?
ISAIAH SAXON: Over a year ago I received a turn-of-the-century Opticon [stereo image] viewer along with a suitcase of stereo pairs and we became obsessed with 3D. Then we saw the film Deep Sea 3D and after experiencing that we decided we weren’t going to shoot 2D anymore if we could help it. So from here on out, it’s all 3D.

How did the Björk video come to you and what is the basic concept of the video?
IS: Björk had seen our last music video (Grizzly Bear) and gave us a call. The concept of the video is our attempt at creating mytho-poetic cosmology of a primitive world complete with water deities and the struggle towards the future. The main theme being nomadism since it is for the track ‘Wanderlust.’

There are a number of different elements shot, or created in post, that all have to be combined, There is a large-scale, pre-human Yak-puppet, about 7-feet long and 7-feet tall, then there is Björk, then there is a version of Björk that she wears on her backpack played by a professional dancer, a large river god/transcendental beast, the landscapes shot in miniature and the CG river. So each of those elements were manifested in a completely different environment and shot differently.

How did you decide to use the Silicon Imaging camera to shoot 3D?
IS: We had been researching 3D for a while before this project. We were going to need really small cameras in order to make it work. Basically we had a set of parameters for this project: We wanted to shoot really high resolution, have the ability to shoot high frame rates and keep the rig as small as possible. We went through the list of cameras that were available and there was only really one that fit in our budget range was the Silicon Imaging 2K Mini camera. From there we selected which lenses worked best with it and then designed our camera rig around our lenses. We had really wide angle lenses 5.5 Optix super 16mm lenses and Cooke 12.5 lenses. Those are both Super 16mmm lenses and are directly compatible with the SI-2K Mini.

Can you explain how the cameras are set up to shoot 3D?
IS:Basically you are recreating the distance between human eyes. So the general setting is keeping the camera’s 2.5 inches apart. But if you are shooting things closer than 10 feet you have to put the cameras closer together. If you are shooting scale models like we were the cameras must be closer together than physically possible so for tat you use a beam-splitter. The technology behind that is pretty old and we built our own beam-splitter. We worked with a couple guys that had some experience in fabrication. We designed the camera rig in Rhino (CAD system). We found a parts distributor that had extruded aluminum modular framing and downloaded parts from their library and designed the entire camera structure around our lenses and what size beam-splitter we would use.

The splitter is a thin, 2mm sheet of glass that has titanium coating on it that allows the visible light spectrum to pass through it and be reflected by it. If you look at one side of it and the pother side is perfectly dark then the other side will be perfectly reflected. So one camera is positioned above it shooting down into it at a 45 degree angle and the other camera is behind it shooting through it. And you align the cameras perfectly so they are seeing the exact same image and then you offset one camera, the right camera in our case, to get the interocular.

We shot scale models for our landscapes and one of the puppets and also for close-ups because we needed and an adjustable interocular. The beam-splitter allows you to have an interocular of zero, where you are seeing the same thing. So you can adjust it in fine increments.

What was the rig on set?
SEAN HELLFRITSCH: We had the [SI-2K] Mini’s mounted on arms that hung out in the right spot in relation to the mirror and then those were tethered over GB Ethernet to PCs that we built and then we had a monitor with polarized 3D display so that we could view the 3D in realtime while we were shooting.

One of the sweet things about the Silicon Imaging software is that it will output to two DVI monitors. So we had those computers set up so we could take the signal from each camera and have that on a regular 2D monitor for viewing but also take the second signal and run it to the 3D display. All you have to do is flip the image coming from the beam-splitter because it is upside down but other than that there is no processing required.

Were you able to playback in 3D?
SH: Well kind of. Since it was on two different cameras you would have to start both playback devices at the same time. Silicon Imaging didn’t have that quite figured out at that point. So we would just try to hit play at the same time on both computers. It would loop like twice in the same synch and then would tend to slip out. So we could do a ghetto 3D playback.

And what were you recording to?
SH: Recording onto internal hard drives of the PCs. The Silicon imaging software controls every aspect of the camera. From color correction, all the setting and al recorded as AVI files using the Cineform codec.

Talk about some of the factors you have to account for when shooting 3D. Do you have to account for focus, lighting, framing any differently? IS: Focus is one thing. We used wide angle lenses to get away from any focus issues. And sometimes we’d have to cut our dolly moves short so that we were always in our focus range so it would hold up from close up to wide shots.

Lighting is only enhanced by using 3D as opposed to 2D. Framing is where you really have to take 3D into account. The carryover from one cut to the next so that there is not a drastically different jump into the 3D effect is something crucial in 3D. So it has much more to do with the blocking and taking a less flashy approach to the staging of shots than you would with 2D because 3D is comfortable with an object being plainly placed in front of you to behold more clearly than if it was staged in a flashy or dynamic way.

Does that mean centering things in the frame?
IS: No necessarily centering everything but not allowing extra setups, no really kinetic movement where things enter and exit frame. Our aesthetic approach to it was inspired by the Natural History Museum diorama’s where everything is contained in an isolated space and has a set-up feel to it. Each shot has its own context and there’s not a lot of coverage of inserts and stuff. We cut on action a few times just to save our ass. But in the storyboarding phase we tried to avoid it as much as possible.

SH: The one situation where it shooting in 3D does come into play is when we are dollying from a close-up into a wide or vice versa. In those instances you do want to adjust for a smaller interocular, otherwise you’ll have a certain depth reading based on how far the object is from camera. You can keyframe it to tweak it but with things like landscapes you can screw the shot up pretty easily.

Explain your post workflow.
IS: Using the Cineform codec you have to use Premier Pro, which we don’t usually use. So there was a bit of a learning curve but the integration between Premiere and After Effects is really nice because we could build each shot as a rough comp in Premiere just by stacking layers and then grab the files from the timeline and copy and paste them into After Effects which is huge timesaver,. You used to have to prep each clip and export a QuickTime and then bring it into After Effects. So being locked into a post workflow we weren’t used to was a little problematic at first but once we were in it worked great.

Do you have to approach the editing and compositing differently for 3D?
IS: In the edit you don’t address the 3D. You work with the one eye. In the composite you work on one eye first just like a traditional 2D film. Once your right eye has been built and set you then take all your left eye footage and make it mimic what you did with your right eye. It’s a lot of tedious copying and pasting of all the parameters and then a lot of tweaking for whatever discrepancy there was in the left eye. Then you feed those into two different comps, which creates the anaglyph of the red and blue so that you can view the 3D with the glasses and you can slip and slide and adjust the 3D perspective.

You can lock a comp in After Effects, so you lock one comp, your right eye and then go into the other, your left, and adjust it to slide the 3D perspective. So you can adjust it on the fly and you can change all the perspective of each layer. We used mostly Premier and After Effects though some people were using Imagineer Mocah for some of the roto work.

And are you finishing in 2K?
IS: No. Since the focus issues limited our camera moves in post we did a lot of digital zooms. Part of our desire to shoot 2K was not necessarily that we wanted to print to film but that we didn’t have the option of zooming with our lenses so we wanted to have the option of moving the camera around if needed. So we our finished resolution is going to be baby-HD (960x720).

You also mentioned a CG river. How are you creating that?
IS: We’re using a hair module Softimage XSI for a CG river. The look we wanted in the river was a rendering of this Japanese-type aesthetic of a river where it is small faceted strands of liquid movement all moving independently in a stringing way. That was the approach we wanted for the river in order to match into the heightened reality with the puppets and costumes and everything else. So we ended up using the hair module in XSI because it was the only thing that could move in that way and it seemed like a reasonable approach without having to hand-animate every string of the river. The hair gets moved by a real water simulation underneath it but it is actually water and hair and then Real Flow foam and splashes and bubbling on top of that.

And what about color correction?
IS: We haven’t gotten there yet. In the past what we’ve done is used a batching technique in Photoshop because that program we are more comfortable with and haven’t really found comparable tools. Specifically the selective color control in Photoshop has a really intuitive feel for us that we haven’t found in even the high-end color correctors. So we’ve always run our project on a shot-by-shot batch basis through Photoshop using he automator. We’re not sure whether we will use that on this project but if we can’t find anything that gives us that control we will.

http://www.studiodaily.com/main/technique/...udies/8811.html

The post production pictures look amazing. After 3 stinkers, I believe this is the video that's gonna rectify Björk's work yet again.


"Wanderlust" promo
1. Radio Edit
2. Matthew Herbert Mix
3. Ratatat Remix
CODE
http://www.mediafire.com/?fddnjed1tog

Sunday, 9 March 2008

EXCLUSIVE --- 3 PICTURES FROM BJÖRK NEW CLIP "WANDERLUST"

 - next picture
 - next picture
 - next picture
Premieres on March 13th
What do u think of it? Do u think is going to be a great video? COMMENT..........

Preview PREMIERE of Björk - Wanderlust, in New York

The clip directed by Wanderlust Pictura Encyclopedia will be screened for the first time in New York at Deitch Studios Thursday, March 13. The screening will be accompanied by a making-of on the realization of 3D clip. Another screening is scheduled in Los Angeles on March 25.

The clip, which lasted 7 minutes 36, will receive 3 versions: a 2D, 3D version for the DVD version and another for 3D projections in some cinemas and museums.






Björk - Earth Intruders (DVDRIP)

[PDVD_390.BMP]

Vídeo Bjork Earth intruders
File Size: 68 Mb
Source: DVD (P.O)
Quality: 85%

rapidshare
megaupload

Monday, 3 March 2008

ARTIST OF THE MONTH: BJÖRK

Special Björk

For a SPECIAL BJÖRK, click on the picture:

Björk latest videos: soon to download


INNOCENCE & DECLARE INDEPENDENCE

COMING SOON

DECLARE INDEPENDENCE

BJÖRK - interview

Funny girl

January 19, 2008
Bjork performs at the Big Day Out, Flemington racecourse, on Monday, January 28.

Bjork performs at the Big Day Out, Flemington racecourse, on Monday, January 28.
Photo: Supplied

An enduring pop and enigmatic phenomenon, Bjork delights in self-parody. Bernard Zuel talks with her ahead of her Melbourne show.

SOME DAY SOMEONE WILL sit down and explain just how, despite all the evidence to the contrary, Bjork Gudmundsdottir is considered close enough to the centre of popular culture to actually be a headline act at both the Sydney Festival and the Big Day Out.

Sure, she gets by with just a single name but she doesn't make pop records. Not like a Kylie, Madonna or Beyonce. She sells records around the world, from Peru to Perth. But nowhere does she do that with anything like the heft to challenge a Foo Fighters or Justin Timberlake. She made a movie. But that was directed by a Danish madman not a Spielberg and seen by a hardy dozen or so.

Some day someone will explain why a tiny Icelandic woman, who speaks with an accent part Norse and part Norf Lon'on, is best known by non-music fans as the person who turned up at the Oscars seemingly dressed as a swan and a few years ago made an album consisting of nothing but voices, doesn't just get such attention but deserves it.

And when they do explain it they may make reference to nights like one last year, at the Coachella music festival, in the desert of southern California. That night, Bjork and a large, almost all-female band, all in floridly colourful and often bizarre costumes - Bjork arrived in a hat seemingly made of five giant pompoms - took to a stage dotted with video screens, flags and unidentifiable objets d'art and blew our tiny minds.

Around me were gobsmacked faces, some mutterings of the "what is this weird shit" type, including from a few music journalists, it should be noted, and many a bemused but beaming face figuring that even if this wasn't making any immediate sense it was sure enough staggeringly entertaining. And funny.

Bjork has commented that people take her more seriously than she would like, that they forget the humour and fun. On the phone from somewhere in Central America. She's sailing from Peru to Mexico, reading South American novels and poetry along the way. Bjork murmurs agreement as I point out that while Coachella was a fantastic explosion of colour and movement and pleasure, not everybody reacts well to humour in music.

"Coachella was our first show and it was a bit of a rehearsal," she says brightly. "We were a bit wooden and nervous and I think we are more flexible now. We have rehearsed more songs now so every show is different. We can be calm and poetic and then we can be hooligans or we can do a mix of the two."

In that odd accent with its idiosyncratic pronunciations - thank you comes out more like sank chew - the phrase hooligan sounds both odd and appropriate. Her music can be delicate and almost ephemeral, light and danceable but also pulsating and driven by electronic energy. If you're not careful it can mug you and leave you stunned.

What determines the kind of show we will see; is it how she woke up that morning?

"Coachella was probably a hooligan show because we were playing really late and it's hard at a festival to play a lot of calm songs because people have been there a long time and the concentration is different so you end up playing a lot of hooligan songs," Bork says.

"We try to take in how everyone is feeling in the band. Our first show here (in South America) an hour before we played our keyboard player found out that his father had died so the show was really sombre and quiet. It was one of my favourite shows of the tour. But then three days later we played a completely different show, totally different songs and some people who saw both shows couldn't believe it was the same band.

"With the humour, I said it a few times now but it's strange because I think it would be obvious. I think eight out of 10 of my lyrics are like self-parody. Most of my friends I've had for like 20 years know this but I think when you talk about me in the context of other pop, things go a bit pear-shaped. It's all supposed to be very serious and there is just not a lot of room for humour. I also so think it's the times. Things are very conservative in the Bush years. Unfortunately, the older I get the more I realise that the President does have a lot of influence culturally across the world. It's a pain in the ass but it's true.

"I'd like to see Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix walk down the red carpet at the MTV awards but I think they would just be ridiculed. There's just no room for this when it's so conservative."

Some of the conservatives argue that things are too serious right now to be laughed at, but they forget that that is exactly when it's important to laugh.

"I just think it's a fear of death. People don't want to be deep, it has to be superficial so it's dressing in armour with black sunglasses, very cool, but not revealing, not thinking. But you know people may misunderstand me but that's OK, I get enough appreciation. But I hope that when Bush leaves people will loosen up a little bit."

Just as big a mistake as ignoring the humour in Bjork's songs and show would be to see only the humour. Her recent album, Volta, the songs from which will make up the bulk of shows she'll play in Australia, has several tracks addressing cultural and political independence, military adventurism and, in the most powerful and controversial moment, a female suicide bomber in Palestine.

In that song, Hope, Bjork sings, "What's the lesser of two evils: If a suicide bomber/Made to look pregnant/Manages to kill her target/Or not?/What's the lesser of two evils/If she kills them/Or dies in vain?" There is no answer in the song but Bjork declares that "nature has fixed no limits on our hopes".

What sort of reaction does she get when she plays Hope live? It's hard not to respond to it, emotionally and viscerally.

"We played it at (British outdoor festival) Glastonbury with (African kora player) Toumani Diabate, and it was incredible. But then I don't think people were listening to the lyrics, it was more an emotional thing," she concedes.

"For me, writing the lyrics was an emotional thing. Obviously, it's about such a traumatic event and then to put it in a ballad I found really funny. It's just my warped sense of humour singing a ballad and singing something that would be (she puts on her best warbling Celine Dion voice) 'I love you, I want to have dinner with you' and then you're actually singing about a pregnant suicide bomber, I just find that very funny.

"There is sort of irony in it but it deals with facts, the situation you read about and you can't grasp it. You can't get your head around it."

Was she trying for her own sake to understand the thinking behind such an act?

"I felt at the time I was just trying to get into that woman's head, what she was thinking and what would drive her to do something like that," Bjork says.

She goes on to criticise the way the media - "who should be neutral but there was so much fury" - first vilified the woman, "for daring to play with something so sacred as pregnancy and fool us" with what was assumed to be a fake pregnancy. But then when it was realised later that she had been pregnant, "they were kind of forgiving because it must have meant so much to her that she killed her own baby.

"This song is sort of about that double-sided standard."

There's a reason, actually many reasons, why Bjork isn't like the other pop stars.

Bjork performs at the Big Day Out, Flemington racecourse, on Monday, January 28. www.bigdayout.com

The Age

BJÖRK - interview

Made to mingle with electricity

Matthew Westwood | January 10, 2008

THE voice that comes down the line is unmistakable: girlish, slightly sibilant, and with a catch in it that is all Bjork's own.

On the phone from Iceland, she's discussing her country's long isolation and its 500-year history as a colony of Norway and then Denmark. Colonialism does peculiar things to a nation's psyche.

"There has always been a lot of mistrust of foreigners here, that they are evil and corrupted," she says. "I guess the Danes didn't give us a good example, basically just by being colonisers. Any colonisation isn't a good idea, it doesn't matter which nationality."

Iceland finally gained independence when it became a republic in 1944, the year, Bjork says, her father was born. People of her generation were curious about the world but felt hamstrung by an attitude that Australians might recognise as cultural cringe.

"Its hard to explain," Bjork says, "but it's a lack of confidence. When you're a colony for so long, you feel like a second-class citizen. I am Icelandic, yes, but I was also the one who went out there and mingled my voice with electricity. I collaborated with foreigners and travelled a lot."

It hardly needs reporting that Bjork says she's one of the more outgoing Icelanders. She first came to international attention 20 years ago, when she fronted the indie band the Sugarcubes, and she rapidly gained prominence with her solo album Debut in 1993. Extreme fashion, an award-winning role in Lars von Trier's film, Dancer in the Dark and behavioural quirks have kept her in public view. Moreover, her highly individual, intricately textured music has given her credibility in both the fringe and the mainstream and, like Britain's Radiohead, a more than nodding acquaintance with classical music's avant-garde.

Bjork is about to make a return visit to Australia: a tour with the Big Day Out bandwagon and, between those dates, a single concert on the Sydney Opera House forecourt as part of the Sydney Festival.

"I still can't quite understand how Bjork is as popular as she is," says festival director Fergus Linehan, "when you get down to how brazen she is, going to the beat of her own drum. If she weren't such a famous figure, he adds, her music would not be out of place in one of the city's small chamber-music venues. "It's quite a phenomenon with her, because of the complexity of her music. She falls into a very different camp."

Linehan has given prominence to rock in the 2008 festival, and Bjork appears in the program brochure alongside the likes of Brian Wilson, of Beach Boys fame.

Mention of this indirectly leads Bjork into the discussion about colonialism and globalisation. At the State Theatre this week, Wilson and his band replayed the Beach Boys greatest hits: little vignettes of sun-bleached innocence, with all that surfin', dancin' and gettin' around. The songs are particularly, almost myopically, Californian. Does Bjork's music have a similar genius of place, in the glaciers and volcanos of Iceland?

"Yes and no," she says. "I think I am a very Icelandic person in every way. But, then again, I think my position as an Icelander was to go out and meet people. I also think that, with globalisation and everything, being from one country and having that particular one sound of whatever your nation represents ... is not true. There's no such thing any more."

Her music, she continues, is more cosmopolitan in approach. "To be in the moment, to be a 2008 person, it's more of an international affair, especially sonically. You hear the radio in a taxi, and go to an Indian restaurant and hear Indian music. You're hearing everything. I think you can still be from where you are, and be truthful about that, but you are still a person of the world."

Certainly, her latest album, Volta, draws from trans-hemispherical sources. The Malian kora player Toumani Diabate, for example, appears on the track Hope, and a Chinese pipa player Min Xiao-Fen, accompanies I See Who You Are. As well as contributions from another Sydney Festival alumnus, singer Antony Hegarty, and the American producer-du-jour Timbaland, Volta features a brass band, whose chorales and punchy chords are elemental to the sound-world.

None of these, however, take precedence over Bjork's voice, which is a universe of its own. She yelps, growls, and leaps sudden, unexpected intervals. The voice is more than a highly expressive instrument, however: Bjork regards it as the source of all her music.

"Every time I start an album, I'm in a place I've never been," she says. "I'm blindfolded and a bit lost. And I quite like that feeling. Usually, because I'm a singer, I use my voice as a tool. I will usually walk a lot outside, and sing a lot, and ideas will come to me. The second thing is the emotional state where I'm at. Then I will maybe go out and arrange things, and find collaborators, depending on the emotional state I'm in."

A picture forms of her walking through the snow: intoning, incanting, willing a song into being. "The melodies almost always come first," she continues. "And sometimes it's a long process. I will let it (the melody) lie there, and if it comes back to me, it's important. I have a faith in the simplicity of the melody: it stands for something quite ancient and almost shamanic. All the best melodies in the world, no matter what music it is, they have some magical construction inside them. Each constellation of notes stands for different emotional states."

The relationship between the voice and electronics, she says, is critical. In so much electronic music, especially dance music, the voice is subservient to beat: words are made to fit the rhythm. Bjork says her approach is different, in that she forms her melodies first, and the beats are cut to fit. Nevertheless, she counts herself as part of a European tradition of electronic music that includes Kraftwerk and Brian Eno, as opposed to the blues-based, American tradition of rock'n'roll.

"I personally think people like (composers) Philip Glass and Steve Reich are connected to that tradition ... (they have) those rock chords in that repetition. And then you have another side, which is electronic music, which is more a European thing. It has a very different origin to rock music. It's like two very different music trees."

Karlheinz Stockhausen, she says, was the godfather of the European branch. The German composer, who died last month, was a pioneer of electronic art music. Bjork met him twice and interviewed him for a magazine. His music did not directly influence her own, she says. "A lot of it was 1950s avant-garde that maybe is and maybe isn't so helpful."

Rather, it was his freewheeling imagination that captured hers. "I think he was very inspirational, mostly through his lectures," she says. "I think he had that effect on a lot of people my age. You read his lectures, and they are so optimistic."

While classical music had its doomsayers, "Stockhausen was the only one who was excited about the 21st century. He said it's going to be amazing. We might have killed all the animals by then, but we'll be communicating telepathically, through transmitters or whatever, which we are, I guess."

Bjork's involvement in the Sydney Festival is, in some ways, a missed opportunity. It could have been an occasion to see her performances alongside, for example, the work of her partner, the video artist Matthew Barney, with whom she made the film, Drawing Restraint 9. Her concerts will not disappoint, according to reports from earlier dates elsewhere.

"I've got brass instruments and a lot of electronic instruments," she says of the line-up. "It's probably my most hooligan, warrior-woman tour. I've done tours with symphony orchestras and choirs, inside opera houses, that are very delicate. This is the opposite, an outdoor pagan thing."

It may also be her last tour for a while, as her daughter with Barney, Isadora, is approaching school age. "I didn't tour for four years before this, so I've been enjoying it. My daughter is going to school next autumn, so I'm making the most of it before I have to sit still for a while."

Bjork performs at the Sydney Opera House for the Sydney Festival on January 23. She appears for Big Day Out at the Gold Coast, January 20; Sydney, January 25; Melbourne, January 28; Adelaide, February 1; Perth February 3.






Björk - Wanderlust and Portugal concert

Wanderlust singles pack


The upcoming release of WANDERLUST is celebrated with the release of a special limited edition package of Vinyl, DVD and CD of the song. The video is made as a 3 Dimensional video, so one needs 3D spectacles to view the splendour.

A pre-order form is now available from One Little Indian for this release, made available first through here. We've been told that these have had great respoonse and they have sold out quicker than anticipated. The previous ones have all sold out.

Björk: PRE-ORDER - Wanderlust - Double Pack



PRE-ORDER - Wanderlust - Double Pack

Wanderlust - Double Pack - 12” & CD & DVD In Special Pack! (Limited Edition Series Of 10,000)

Pre-order: We aim to get this product to you for around April 7th or as soon as we can.

Note: If you order this product along with any other item in the same order, we will send out the order together at the same time. So if you would like to order another product to arrive before this item please order them separately.

12” - Double Heavy Weight Vinyl

A1. Wanderlust – Matthew Herbert Remix
B1. Wanderlust – Mark |Stent Mix
C1. Wanderlust – Ratatat Remix
D1. Wanderlust – Mark Stent Instrumental


CD
01. Wanderlust – Matthew Herbert Remix
02. Wanderlust – Mark |Stent Mix
03. Wanderlust – Ratatat Remix
04. Wanderlust – Mark Stent Instrumental

DVD
01. Wanderlust Video + Special 3D Glasses!

For more information, visit this artist's webpage at indian.co.uk










£17.87

We can also confirm a concert in Portugal in the summer. The details are as follows:

Festival Sudoeste TMN – Herdade da Casa Branca – Zambujeira do Mar
7th August 2008
www.sudoestetmn.pt

That should make our day!




Björk - Earth Intruders

download:
http://www.guba.com/watch/2000987796?duration_step=0&fields=23&filter_tiny=0&pp=40&query=bjork&sb=10&set=-1&sf=0&size_step=0&o=3&sample=1204509615:575956c5542ae2cfd2d226375e4b65127240dd24

http://www.createdigitalmotion.com/images/2007/05/earthintruders.jpg