On 1 March 1973, a new moon rose over rock music. Immersive, quadrophonic, celestial and deeply introspective, Pink Floyd’s eighth album arrived in a heady flurry of cash tills, chiming clocks, pained-angel arias and cold, disembodied voices speaking of violence, death and insanity. Where their prog-rock peers were busy crafting grandiose yet chintzy pantomimes of Arthurian legend, sci-fi fantasy and messianic pinball, the Floyd delved into the dark universe of humanity’s inner space; into the stresses and horrors of everyday life that daily push us all to the brink. A record as relatable as it was cosmic, as melodic on the topics of “Time” and “Money” as it was climactic on the themes of war, division and madness, The Dark Side of the Moon set a new standard for high-concept intellectual rock. Forty-five million prism-clad units later, it remains the fourth best-selling record ever made.
Fifty years on, we seem...
Fifty years on, we seem...
- 3/1/2023
- by Mark Beaumont
- The Independent - Music
Before diving into this month’s edition of The Inventory, check out last week’s discussion on the often-forgotten survival horror game Zombi!
For this month’s edition of The Inventory: Safe Room’s monthly review show, we have yet another eclectic mix of horror offerings that dabble in both intensity spectrums of the genre.
For this episode, we begin with the gorgeously twee physics puzzles of Birth, to the Souls-inspired Metroidvania madness of Elderand, to the hellish office politics of Redtape, before Neil unpacks Resident Evil Village VR and Zombieland VR: Headshot Fever Reloaded. Then we have a lengthy chat about the alternate-history horrors of Atomic Heart!
Safe Room is a weekly horror video game discussion podcast with new episodes every Monday on
iTunes/Apple, Sticher, Spotify, Google Podcasts, and Linktree for additional streaming services.
Feel free to follow the show and hosts on Twitter:
Safe Room | Neil...
For this month’s edition of The Inventory: Safe Room’s monthly review show, we have yet another eclectic mix of horror offerings that dabble in both intensity spectrums of the genre.
For this episode, we begin with the gorgeously twee physics puzzles of Birth, to the Souls-inspired Metroidvania madness of Elderand, to the hellish office politics of Redtape, before Neil unpacks Resident Evil Village VR and Zombieland VR: Headshot Fever Reloaded. Then we have a lengthy chat about the alternate-history horrors of Atomic Heart!
Safe Room is a weekly horror video game discussion podcast with new episodes every Monday on
iTunes/Apple, Sticher, Spotify, Google Podcasts, and Linktree for additional streaming services.
Feel free to follow the show and hosts on Twitter:
Safe Room | Neil...
- 2/28/2023
- by Neil Bolt
- bloody-disgusting.com
On 1 March 1973, a new moon rose over rock music. Immersive, quadrophonic, celestial and deeply introspective, Pink Floyd’s eighth album arrived in a heady flurry of cash tills, chiming clocks, pained-angel arias and cold, disembodied voices speaking of violence, death and insanity. Where their prog-rock peers were busy crafting grandiose yet chintzy pantomimes of Arthurian legend, sci-fi fantasy and messianic pinball, the Floyd delved into the dark universe of humanity’s inner space; into the stresses and horrors of everyday life that daily push us all to the brink. A record as relatable as it was cosmic, as melodic on the topics of “Time” and “Money” as it was climactic on the themes of war, division and madness, The Dark Side of the Moon set a new standard for high-concept intellectual rock. Forty-five million prism-clad units later, it remains the fourth best-selling record ever made.
Fifty years on, we seem...
Fifty years on, we seem...
- 2/28/2023
- by Mark Beaumont
- The Independent - Music
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