Golem Dance Cult



Golem Dance Cult



Golem Dance Cult

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Golem Dance Cult

born in portugal

Golem Dance Cult came about when Charles Why (Nexus, L-DOPA) and Laur (Sparkling Bombs, KevinK Band), two guys who grew up playing loud guitars, chose to make music with a different kind of beat. Their sound is kind of a strange groove: heavy rock mixed with a danceable, machine-like rhythm. They aren't after a polished sound; instead, they want to keep the raw feeling and energy of the first try.

Golem Dance Cult came about when Charles Why (Nexus, L-DOPA) and Laur (Sparkling Bombs, KevinK Band), two guys who grew up playing loud guitars, chose to make music with a different kind of beat. Their sound is kind of a strange groove: heavy rock mixed with a danceable, machine-like rhythm. They aren't after a polished sound; instead, they want to keep the raw feeling and energy of the first try.

Their song Pretty at Dawn, from the album Shamanic Faultlines, shows this idea well. It was put together at Black Obsidian Woodshed and mastered by Joe Carra, and the track really takes you into their world. In it, ritual elements—a nod to their heavy guitar roots—mix with modern electronic beats to make a hypnotic sound. It's rock music taken apart and put back together with a sampler and layers.

More About

More About

Golem

Dance Cult

Golem

Dance Cult

Golem

Dance Cult

But there's more to it than just the music. The video, made by Milan Bruneau and edited by Klaus Karloff, looks into the tricky parts of relationships, pushing viewers to look at hidden truths. It's not just something to watch; it's a key piece of the whole experience. They say it best: Think of an old Hammer horror movie directed by Dalí and recolored by Andy Warhol. That's Golem Dance Cult: a heavy, psychedelic, dance-friendly ceremony where the groove is magic and being imperfect is what makes them real.

But there's more to it than just the music. The video, made by Milan Bruneau and edited by Klaus Karloff, looks into the tricky parts of relationships, pushing viewers to look at hidden truths. It's not just something to watch; it's a key piece of the whole experience. They say it best: Think of an old Hammer horror movie directed by Dalí and recolored by Andy Warhol. That's Golem Dance Cult: a heavy, psychedelic, dance-friendly ceremony where the groove is magic and being imperfect is what makes them real.

Discography

Discography

SPOTIFY

SPOTIFY