TO THE ARTISTS - EXPERIMENTAL EXTENDED REMIX
Автор: TRINOVA FM - WHERE THE WORDS MEET TRANCE MUSIC
Загружено: 2025-10-17
Просмотров: 1775
Описание:
TO THE ARTISTS - EXPERIMENTAL REMIX
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PLEASE LISTEN TO TO THE ORIGINAL TRACK
THEN THIS ONE AND THEN COMMENT BELOW.
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Francis William Lauderdale Adams (1862–1893) was a british-born writer, poet, novelist, journalist, and social critic. he was born in malta, the son of a british army surgeon and a novelist. educated in england, adams spent time in paris and later emigrated to australia, where he became known for his outspoken radicalism and sympathy for the working class.
he wrote novels, essays, plays, and especially poetry that challenged the inequalities of victorian society. his best-known collection, songs of the army of the night (1894), is a fierce expression of socialist ideals and moral indignation at social injustice.
adams suffered from chronic illness, likely tuberculosis, and took his own life in 1893 at the age of thirty. despite his short life, he left a body of work notable for its passion, clarity, and uncompromising call for truth in art and politics.
poem description: to the artists
to the artists is a short, direct poem in which adams addresses creative people—painters, poets, musicians—with both admiration and challenge. the speaker rejects the idea that art’s purpose is to please the powerful or decorate the wealthy. instead, adams insists that artists have a moral duty to confront social suffering and injustice through their work.
the tone is urgent and admonitory. he begins by acknowledging that society claims “great lords have raised up art,” but turns this idea against them, suggesting that real art cannot thrive under the patronage of privilege. the poem demands that art be alive, truthful, and in service of humanity rather than luxury. its rhythm is simple, almost like a chant, and its diction plain but forceful.
in essence, it is a call for artists to use their gifts not as ornaments for the powerful but as weapons of conscience.
trance song description: to the artists (vocal mix)
this imagined trance track takes adams’s poem as its lyrical foundation. the song begins with slow, shimmering synth pads and an atmospheric hum. a soft voice, slightly echoing, recites the opening line—“you tell me these great lords have raised up art”—over distant chords.
as the rhythm builds, a steady four-beat kick emerges, and fragments of the poem loop in rhythm: “art must be free… art must be true.” the breakdown features layered vocal harmonies repeating the word “rise,” swelling into a luminous drop where melodic arpeggios and deep bass intertwine.
emotionally, the track balances melancholy and transcendence—transforming the poem’s moral urgency into a feeling of awakening and collective movement. by the final section, the poem’s refrain becomes an anthem, merging nineteenth-century protest with twenty-first-century euphoria.
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#francisadams #totheartists #victorianpoetry #radicalart #vocaltrance #poetryandmusic #artandjustice #literarytrance #trance #trancemusic2025 #edm #edmforlife #trinovafm
• POETRY IN MOTION
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