Man I'm lucky...

I think all of Mr V's work is good, regardless of whether it's his nature focus or science focus.

At the end of the day, all musicians must grow, you can't keep doing the same thing all the time and not adjust to changes in your interests, even if the changes are subtle. Vintersorg is no exclusion to this. No doubt his next released will be different yet again.

No matter how he goes, I'll always give it a go, he has a good and also different musical vision which is really interesting.

Thumbs up Mr V, for all your works.
 
dagaz said:
Let's not forget what great things he has done with Otyg, Havayoth and Borknagar...

You are talking as if the guy is dead :eek:
hehehe but you are right , he was a great hero that has fought many wars and I hope he will drink beer in peace in Walhall
 
walkyr said:
You are talking as if the guy is dead :eek:
hehehe but you are right , he was a great hero that has fought many wars and I hope he will drink beer in peace in Walhall


Ups.. I didn't realize that .. dumb.. dumb.. dumb.. :oops:
 
God And The New Physics - Paul Davies
Genesis Of The Cosmos - Paul A. LaViolette
The Universe In A Nutshell - Stephen Hawking
an older one...Cosmos - Carl Sagan

Add to that list the three books I recommend every time someone mentions something about physics:

Men of Mathematics - E. T. Bell (not 100% historically accurate or politically correct or anything--somewhat insensitive remarks about Jews were taken out in later editions--but Bell's writing style is very enjoyable)
Hyperspace - Michio Kaku
Inward Bound - A. M. Pais
 
Of course, Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time is a seminal masterpiece of this field of study. Read that.

And, I too sort of miss the old folk metal days, but then his new stuff is great in a different way. After all, there are tons of folk metal bands out there now, but only Vintersorg sounds like Vintersorg does now.

P.S. Is anyone else's favorite album in the old style Hedniskhjartad? (I can't get the umlauts on this keyboard.)