Musterion

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Underneath Stockholm 00:00 Tools
Baphomet: The Magus, The Fool (Fo-Hi), The Voyager 00:00 Tools
I - Passing 00:00 Tools
Visit In Tibet 00:00 Tools
The Third Man 00:00 Tools
Yang Tul 00:00 Tools
Unknown Kadath 00:00 Tools
The Tower Of Koth 00:00 Tools
II - Trapped 00:00 Tools
Tannhauser Gate 00:00 Tools
Fire Is The Devil 00:00 Tools
Unknown Kadath (remix) 00:00 Tools
III - Lost 00:00 Tools
The Arm 00:00 Tools
IV - Dreams 00:00 Tools
V - Released 00:00 Tools
Beatnik 00:00 Tools
Grotowski's Last Journey - Apocalypsis Cum Figuris 00:00 Tools
The Silver Mirrors Of Your Eyes 00:00 Tools
Baphomet, The Magus, The Fool 00:00 Tools
The Magus, The Fool (Fo-Hi), The Voyager 00:00 Tools
Grotowski's Last Journey - Apo 00:00 Tools
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Musterion is the solo Project of Simon AA Kölle. Musterion is fresh Music which injects new life into the genre of Dark ambient and Darkwave. The music is created with lots of sounds, instruments, electronic soundscapes and improvisation. Profundly inspired by the works, of such as David Lynch and William S. Burroughs and with a background in the avant garde theater; Simon AA Kölle explore the occult, the surreal and dream worlds with Musterion. The full lenght CD debut of Musterion was released 2006 on Horus CyclicDaemon. Before that Musterion have been heard on compilations such as "Lust from the underworld", "AL 100th Anniversary" and "Waerloga compilation vol.1 - A Tribute to Uglakh". What does the Greek word musterion mean? Well, of course it means "mystery." At least that’s what you’d conclude by reading the majority of English translations. Actually, there’s nothing mysterious about a musterion. The word simply refers to something that cannot be known unless it is revealed, that is, a "secret." This is what was described in Ephesians 5:32 ("This is a great secret, but I am talking about Christ and the church") and in 1 Corinthians 15:51 ("Let me tell you a secret. Not all of us will die, but all of us will be changed…."). Linguists call the confusion of a Greek word’s root with its English counterpart "etymologizing"— an evil to be avoided like the plague. English speakers should, of course, know this already. There is no butter in buttermilk, no egg in eggplant, no worms (or wood) in wormwood, no pine (or apple) in a pineapple, no ham in hamburger. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.