There are at least three artists with this name: 1) Garden Of Delight (1991-1997, 2000-2008) was a German Gothic Rock band. Artaud Seth proclaimed that G.O.D. would produce seven albums in seven years with seven songs each -- seven is a very powerful number and, in some arcane traditions, seven thrice is the number of perfection. The corpus of Garden of Delight cannot be viewed as individual albums or songs -- they are all integral aspects of the whole plan that Artaud was consistently explicat...
There are at least three artists with this name:
1) Garden Of Delight (1991-1997, 2000-2008) was a German Gothic Rock band. Artaud Seth proclaimed that G.O.D. would produce seven albums in seven years with seven songs each -- seven is a very powerful number and, in some arcane traditions, seven thrice is the number of perfection. The corpus of Garden of Delight cannot be viewed as individual albums or songs -- they are all integral aspects of the whole plan that Artaud was consistently explicating.
G.O.D. were heavily influenced by second-wave goth rock bands like The Sisters of Mercy and Fields of the Nephilim, certainly resembling their forerunners in terms of sound while often surpassing them conceptually. However, Artaud sneered at the notion that the Garden of Delight was a "goth" band. Though there was a certain degree of Sisters and FotN influence, Garden of Delight's music had an incredible diversity. Indeed, while all of their albums have had thematic consistency, their music changed greatly through the years. The Garden of Delight were never content with a particular "sound." They adopted one, mastered it, synthesized it with something else, and then moved on. To firmly label the Garden of Delight would imply musical stagnation, which is quite far from the truth.
After the release of the original seven albums, Artaud broke up the band in 1997. Three years later, he reunited it and again released a steady stream of albums, as usual dealing heavily with all kinds of occult and esoteric subject matter. In 2005 the band released the first of the three-album Lutherion cycle. Just after Lutherion III, the band released the album Darkest Hour, an album which bid farewell while revisiting the diversity of sounds the band had employed through its long career. G.O.D. performed its final concert late in 2008, and finally broke up for all time.
The successor to G.O.D. is Artaud's new band the Merciful Nuns, a project that explores much the same lyrical territory as Garden of Delight but is less experimental and bombastic in its sound.
Official Site
2) Garden of Delight is a German Celtic Folk band. The claim they play "Celtic Rock / Irish Speed / Gothic Folk".
Bandmembers
Michael M. Jung - Vocals, Guitars, Mandolin, Banjo, Mandola
Dominik Roesch - Fiddle, Backing Vocals
Sascha Lotz - Guitars, Backing Vocals
Alex Golub - Drums
Elton Scharf - Bass
Dunday - Bass
Steffen Petry - Flute
Dario Gebel - Guitars
Alex Heinz - Drums
Discography
1999 - Songs of the early days
2000 - Songs about love, desire and parting
2001 - Celtic legends
2002 - Traditional & unplugged
2003 - Celtinus
2003 - Hey Hoh
2004 - The last Banshee
2004 - Pirates & Heartbreakers
2005 - Dunkle Seelen
2005 - Keltenherz "Gothicca"
2005 - Rebels, Roses & Celts
2006 - The dancing gypsy
2007 - Boneman-Live 1
2007 - Boneman-Live 2
Sideprojects
Keltenherz
Finnegan Und Der Kobold - a musical/play.
Official site
3) Garden Of Delight was also a very obscure first wave Gothic Rock band from Norway that put out two singles, and an album (that no one has ever seen) active between 1982-1987 after which the band's members changed musical directions. Garden of Delight, reminiscent of the early Cure's instrumental style, released two singles in 1984 of which “Blessed Minutes” and its B-Side “Glory”, appears to have been the first. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
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