wimpel69
06-11-2014, 09:31 AM
Sharing of this album has ended. The FLAC file is gone.
"Well, The Island�s an old work; you�ve got to bear in mind the history of that particular work,�
and he outlines how he was commissioned to do a score for a video-game which led to him booking an
entire orchestra and choir, �and as soon as I finished the computer game, I whipped out my new
symphony and recorded it for nothing there and then! I�m really proud of it. My mum�s used that
particular symphony for cancer healing for the last ten years, quite successfully actually."
Jaz Coleman
Jeremy "Jaz" Coleman (*1960) has had his hand in many genres of music, from post-punk angst
to composing classical music. A Londoner residing in New Zealand, Coleman came to the
public's notice singing and playing keyboards in the band Killing Joke in 1978.
As Killing Joke's career began to slow down in the early '90s, their singer worked
with Art of Noise member Anne Dudley on the 1991 Middle Eastern themed Songs from
the Victorious City. Coleman teamed with Killing Joke bassist Youth and collaborated
on two symphonic albums: 1994's Symphonic Music of the Rolling Stones and 1995's
Us and Them: Symphonic Music of Pink Floyd. In 2000, Coleman arranged his third
symphonic work Riders on the Storm: The Doors Concerto, featuring virtuoso
violinist Nigel Kennedy performing as the voice of Jim Morrison.

Music Composed by
"Jaz" Coleman
Played by the
Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra
With
Hinewehi Mohi (soprano)
Steve Howe (guitar)
And the
Viva Voce Chorus
Conducted by
Peter Scholes

Sharing of this album has ended. The FLAC file is gone.
Enjoy! Don't share! Buy the original! :)
"Well, The Island�s an old work; you�ve got to bear in mind the history of that particular work,�
and he outlines how he was commissioned to do a score for a video-game which led to him booking an
entire orchestra and choir, �and as soon as I finished the computer game, I whipped out my new
symphony and recorded it for nothing there and then! I�m really proud of it. My mum�s used that
particular symphony for cancer healing for the last ten years, quite successfully actually."
Jaz Coleman
Jeremy "Jaz" Coleman (*1960) has had his hand in many genres of music, from post-punk angst
to composing classical music. A Londoner residing in New Zealand, Coleman came to the
public's notice singing and playing keyboards in the band Killing Joke in 1978.
As Killing Joke's career began to slow down in the early '90s, their singer worked
with Art of Noise member Anne Dudley on the 1991 Middle Eastern themed Songs from
the Victorious City. Coleman teamed with Killing Joke bassist Youth and collaborated
on two symphonic albums: 1994's Symphonic Music of the Rolling Stones and 1995's
Us and Them: Symphonic Music of Pink Floyd. In 2000, Coleman arranged his third
symphonic work Riders on the Storm: The Doors Concerto, featuring virtuoso
violinist Nigel Kennedy performing as the voice of Jim Morrison.

Music Composed by
"Jaz" Coleman
Played by the
Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra
With
Hinewehi Mohi (soprano)
Steve Howe (guitar)
And the
Viva Voce Chorus
Conducted by
Peter Scholes

Sharing of this album has ended. The FLAC file is gone.
Enjoy! Don't share! Buy the original! :)