Wymond Miles

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Pale Moon 03:35 Tools
Strange Desire 03:12 Tools
Hidden Things Are Asking You To Find Them 04:56 Tools
Singing the Ending 04:15 Tools
Youth's Lonely Wilderness 03:51 Tools
Run Like The Hunted 04:06 Tools
The Thirst 04:16 Tools
Night Drives 04:07 Tools
Lazarus Rising 04:04 Tools
You and I Are Of The Night 04:17 Tools
Badlands 03:58 Tools
Passion Plays 00:00 Tools
Trapdoors and Ladders 03:20 Tools
Temples of Magick 04:15 Tools
The Ascension 05:33 Tools
As The Orchard Is With Rain 06:20 Tools
White Nights 02:14 Tools
Earth Has Doors, Let Them Open 05:15 Tools
Bronze Patina 01:36 Tools
Vacant Eyes 05:32 Tools
Anniversary Song 04:42 Tools
Why Are You Afraid? 03:18 Tools
Love Will Rise 03:09 Tools
Divided in Two 06:02 Tools
Summer Rains 03:09 Tools
Protection 06:02 Tools
Call by Night 04:14 Tools
Solomon's Song 04:14 Tools
Living Yeshua 06:02 Tools
Bride of the Lamb 04:14 Tools
The Curse 04:14 Tools
Stand Before Me 04:14 Tools
Rear View Mirror 04:14 Tools
Devil's Blue Eyes 04:14 Tools
Batwing (Terminals Cover) 02:42 Tools
Hidden Things 04:56 Tools
Why Are You Afraid 03:18 Tools
Rearview Mirror 03:18 Tools
Temples Of Magick (2012, Earth Has Doors) 04:25 Tools
Batwing 02:42 Tools
Don't Ask This Of Me 04:25 Tools
Earth Has Doors, Let Them Open (2012, Earth Has Doors) 05:12 Tools
Here Come The Bombs! 02:29 Tools
Youth's Lonely Wilderness (2012, Under The Pale Moon) 03:51 Tools
Strange Desire (2012, Under The Pale Moon) 03:12 Tools
Trapdoor & Ladders 00:00 Tools
Living Yeshua (Unreleased Demo) 00:00 Tools
Pale Moon (2012, Under The Pale Moon) 03:35 Tools
Wymond Miles :: Pale Moon 02:42 Tools
Why Are You So Afraid? 02:42 Tools
HIDDEN THINGS ARE ASKING YOU TO FIND THE... 03:35 Tools
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Four years ago Wymond Miles, guitar player and songwriter in San Francisco’s The Fresh & Onlys, began writing solo material thematically based on the concepts of eschatology, anthroposophy, and Gnostic and Hermetic symbolism. Drawing from a vast musical pool of inspiration, including Scott Walker, Robert Wyatt, Arvo Part, and Nikki Sudden amongst others, Earth Has Doors is Miles’ first solo release. Since beginning Miles had basically shelved these songs to attend school, focus on fatherhood, and commit to the demanding schedule of the F&O’s. He earned a degree in humanities with an emphasis on the philosophical implications of the ecological/economic crisis of our times, and that subject matter can be traced throughout his first EP. These songs concisely yet esoterically document the existential crisis of our current epoch — moving from the nothingness of modern materialism, fragmented reductionist thought, and drug escapism to a world imbued with subjectivity and meaning through a new relationship with the Earth and cosmos as alive and full of inherent intelligence. Wymond describes his early writing process: “For the first time I had a sense of place, and a reverence of humility for my surroundings. I was full of wonder, but I felt very small, and went inward to begin the work of writing.” He elaborates, “Sonically the mood had to reflect the somberness of moving between the existential chaos of my twenties into this new perspective of living … The mysterious hues of the soundscape reflect a sense of curiosity and possibility in the canyons of sound.” Working in his home studio and using 8-track tape (the infamous Tascam 388), Miles performs almost everything on this record: guitars, synths, bass, drums, manipulated tape delay, and vocals. A few friends played with him, guesting on drums (“Hidden Things” and “Earth Has Doors”) and viola (“As the Orchard”), while his wife Sarah sings some harmonies on side A. Cut Yourself Free assembles another convergence of moonlit romantic swagger and post-punk massacred urgency. Again self recorded and produced to tape, Miles’ song-craft has emerged more refined and poignant, benefitting from the avalanche of his frenzied live shows, but also adhering to a more minimalistic fashion with crooning mid-era Nick Cave or Bowie/Roxy Music strains of pop-modernism. But what stands at the forefront is Miles’ command of his textural guitar and vintage-synth sprawl that on his choosing can open dream-like vistas, or pierce with an engine’s snarl. Turning to the narrative, Miles weaves each song with its own vignette of story line, often with a vaguely obscured protagonist/antagonist dialog. Relationships in Miles’ sketches are always tangled, if not licentious affairs, but are presented more as lustrous gateways to mend and revitalize rather than squalor in. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.