Friday, July 26, 2024
Aristocratic Radicalism & Counter-Enlightenment Tunes
Friday, July 19, 2024
Beethoven's Hellenic Awakening
Wednesday, July 17, 2024
The Etruscan Gate
Saturday, July 13, 2024
Dante as Ideal
Tuesday, July 9, 2024
Our Journey to the Kyffhäuserreich
One of our upcoming releases will be a return to the past. After the release of “Asgardsrei” in 1999, Absurd wanted to create a split release with Heldentum: “Kyffhäuserreich.” With this, we wanted to express our connection to our homeland, the mythical Kyffhäuser mountain range in northern Thuringia. According to legend, Emperor Barbarossa, an incarnation of Wotan, sleeps in an underground castle while ravens circle the mountain. Every hundred years, he sends a dwarf to check if the ravens are still there. Only when an eagle replaces the ravens will the Emperor awaken to liberate and unite the realm.
Based on this legend, DMD wrote five songs, but they were not recorded at the time. JFN had to go into exile at the end of 1999, and although DMD promised Wolf with a handshake the following year that “Kyffhäuserreich” would still happen (Heldentum recorded their songs the same year, which were released twenty years later as “Das Vermächtnis”), “Kyffhäuserreich” has remained a dream until now. This will soon change!
All five songs for “Kyffhäuserreich,” along with two songs intended for “Blutgericht” but not included on the album, will finally be heard 25 years after their creation and the idea for this release. This will also close this chapter in Absurd’s band history. The Emperor will awaken, and the Reich will return!
Zu Rotbart stehen wir in Treu’ und allezeit bereit,
dem Reiche haben wir uns einst in Stahl und Blut geweiht.
Der Kaiser in dem Berge
Blutweihe
Das Schwert
Der erste Schnee
Tod durch das Schwert
(Bonus) Volksaufstand
(Bonus) Im Glanz des Sonnenrades
SOURCE: www.hordeabsurd.com
Sunday, July 7, 2024
Julius Evola : My Encounter With Codreanu
Among the various leaders of the movements for national reconstruction that emerged during the interwar period, which I had the opportunity to meet, I remember Corneliu Codreanu, the leader of the Romanian Iron Guard, as one of the purest, most righteous, and noblest figures. It was in the spring of 1936 that I met him in Bucharest during a study trip I had undertaken to various European countries at the time.
We enter the building and reach the first floor. Here we are met by a tall and slender young man in casual attire. His open face immediately gives an impression of nobleness, strength and loyalty.This man is Corneliu Codreanu, the leader of the Iron Guard. He is a distinctly Aryo-Roman type—like a contemporary embodiment of the ancient Aryo-Italic world.
Monday, July 1, 2024
The Maiden and Death as Archetypes in European Tradition & Music