1910-1914 Black Magic Recordings - Aleister Crowley

1910-1914 Black Magic Recordings

Aleister Crowley

  • Genre: Spoken Word
  • Release Date: 2007-10-16
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 15

  • ℗ 2007 Cleopatra Records

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Introduction 0:17 USD 0.99
2
The Call of the First Æthyr ( 2:03 USD 0.99
3
The Call of the First Æthyr ( 1:16 USD 0.99
4
The Call of the Second Æthyr 1:38 USD 0.99
5
The Call of the Second Æthyr 0:54 USD 0.99
6
La Gitana 2:33 USD 0.99
7
The Pentagram 1:00 USD 0.99
8
One Sovereign for Woman 0:56 USD 0.99
9
The Poet 0:50 USD 0.99
10
At Sea 1:41 USD 0.99
11
Fingernails 0:43 USD 0.99
12
The Titanic 1:45 USD 0.99
13
Hymn to the American People On 2:47 USD 0.99
14
Excerpts from the Gnostic Mass 2:07 USD 0.99
15
Vive la France 2:16 USD 0.99
1910-1914 Black Magic Recordings - Aleister Crowley
Cover Album 1910-1914 Black Magic Recordings - Aleister Crowley

Reviews

  • Bad recording
    1
    By yepitstrue
    bad sounding recording. Not worth a nickle.
  • Incredible
    5
    By Cosef
    Its awesome to see this on Itunes. Its great. The price also cant be beat. Im a very satisfied customer.
  • Onbalaqua enfeindum
    5
    By SynerJetics
    It's great that these recordings manage to survive. I think many peoples false opinon on him come from their ignorance (lack of knowlege) of him. If you read his writting it is quite plain to see that his intentions are of good nature. As in the Book of the Law, of which many religious folks quote this from his book, "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law" what they commony refeer to as letting people go and kill and commit atrocities (I don't agree with them for a second), but what I never hear is the full passage " Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law" "Love is the law, love under will" "There is no law beyond do what thou wilt". I think what Aleister is saying here is that Gods Laws are simply That we as humans have free will, and let us choose Love". I also think out of humor Mr. Cowley loved shock value.