Daniel Rossen Performs Saint Nothing in a Church for Pitchfork TV
For episode #6 of Pitchfork Weekly, we took Daniel Rossen to a church to perform a song from his new Silent Hour / Golden Mile EP.
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Series Producer: Peter Macia
Series Editor: Jim Larson
Camera: Jim Larson, Tyler Jensen, Sophia Peer
Editors: Jim Larson
Motion Graphics: Mike Renaud/Optimus
Sound Mix & Design: Jeff Curtin, Winston Case
Production Manager: Patrick O'Connor
Executive Producer: RJ Bentler
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Пікірлер: 24
Thank you for upload, this version went missing for awhile and its such a cool setting for this song.
@strangelot
3 жыл бұрын
Interviewed Daniel Rossen on his songwriting process - will post on our channel tomorrow at 2pm CST
Thank you
Magnificent song
@strangelot
3 жыл бұрын
Interviewed Daniel Rossen on his songwriting process - will post on our channel tomorrow at 2pm CST
One of the best videos on youtube, thank you!
Is that the same church where Veckatimest was recorded? Looks similar
i thought he was Daniel Rossenfeld (C418, minecraft OST)
@moonthief8532
4 жыл бұрын
different person
@lyncistso1111
4 жыл бұрын
@@moonthief8532 ooohhhh IS THE "SAIL TO THE MOON " CLIP YOUR'S ???
Why say "perverse" Those of us who've lost our faith will always wonder out our youth - but few, i think, would describe it as "perverse"
@jessemachtolf10
6 жыл бұрын
plumlogan I agree with you. I would not say perverse but I cannot speak for Daniel. What word would you use to describe that experience?
@plumlogan
6 жыл бұрын
Jesse Machtolf i think they're separate ... he's not really speaking to an experience as much as he's saying that he's using a spiritual motif without being spiritual Fundamentalists might call that sacrilegious or profane, but i think mainstream and secular folks would just call it artistic license
@plumlogan
6 жыл бұрын
Jesse Machtolf either way, beautiful song
@heyhut3699
6 жыл бұрын
plumlogan perverse as in dirty
@plumlogan
6 жыл бұрын
Hey Hut i get the implication, i just don't see it as apt - people use religious motifs for irreligious messages without it being dirty ... I certainly don't recognize how it was dirty in this case