3rd single from Duel, the upcoming album, and yes due out in Feb. Got mine preordered already. Yes, Franz Kafka (1883-1924) was a writer and novelist ,from Prague. This song references characters from a couple of his works. Like "Someone's Daughter", a good bit of cleans before getting to the harsh. The 2nd single "Rogue' is all harsh vocals. Tatiana recently joined Spiritbox, at Louder Than Life festival in the USA, they performed the Spiritbox song "Circle With Me". Spiritbox was formed in Canada, female lead vocals (Courtney LaPlante), using both cleans and harsh.
Tatiana Shmayluk on “Kafka”: “Being an artist is sometimes beautiful but most of the time it’s brutal… as our art is dissected word for word and ripped apart note by note, we‘re expected to be on point all-the-time … and when we aren’t, we are scandalized. A true artist is vulnerable but the crowd is most often plagued with vultures who pick at every single move you make. It’s a slippery slope when music means the world to us but how quickly praise turns into prosecution… We are all Kings and Queens for a day but most of the time it feels like a Kafka novel for a lifetime. It‘s exciting but surreal and absurd at the same time"
3rd single from Duel, the upcoming album, and yes due out in Feb. Got mine preordered already.
Yes, Franz Kafka (1883-1924) was a writer and novelist ,from Prague. This song references characters from a couple of his works. Like "Someone's Daughter", a good bit of cleans before getting to the harsh. The 2nd single "Rogue' is all harsh vocals.
Tatiana recently joined Spiritbox, at Louder Than Life festival in the USA, they performed the Spiritbox song "Circle With Me".
Spiritbox was formed in Canada, female lead vocals (Courtney LaPlante), using both cleans and harsh.
Might as well mention Poppy, while we’re at it 😉
GO Jinjer.
Lol nice proggy jazz death metal banger😂😂........deep insightful lyrical poetry from tati based on themes from franz kafka's novella.
thanx for your reaction!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Trial
from Kafka...
warm greetings from the german musician
What wasn't mentioned, of course, was that Kafka wrote in German.
Tatiana Shmayluk on “Kafka”:
“Being an artist is sometimes beautiful but most of the time it’s brutal… as our art is dissected word for word and ripped apart note by note, we‘re expected to be on point all-the-time … and when we aren’t, we are scandalized. A true artist is vulnerable but the crowd is most often plagued with vultures who pick at every single move you make. It’s a slippery slope when music means the world to us but how quickly praise turns into prosecution… We are all Kings and Queens for a day but most of the time it feels like a Kafka novel for a lifetime. It‘s exciting but surreal and absurd at the same time"
She doesn't mention that she's dragged in Existentialism as well 😉
Have you never heard the word kafkaesque?
While looking him up, did you notice his date of death?