Spookylicious Songs: Part Two

Sitting down to read that new supernatural novel and looking for the right ambience?  Writing a paranormal story and need some inspiration?  Searching for songs that will give you chills, goosebumps and shivers?  I have chosen 10 songs I feel evoke a spooky, atmospheric vibe suited to the above tasks. (See the first 10 songs from part one HERE)

If you find something you like, let me know.  Likewise if you think I’m missing some major tunes, please send suggestions my way.

Here’s round 2:

1: “The Grandmother’s House” from the Flowers in the Attic film.  Disturbing story, creepy music.

2: “Bittersweet” by Apocalyptica.  This video uses clips from the tv show Blade. Love the violins.

3: “Le Prince Bleu” by RoBERT featuring Majandra Delfino. You may recognise her name from when she played Maria on the tv show Roswell.  Love the video to this; it’s so spooky.

4: “Full Moon” by The Black Ghosts from the Twilight soundtrack. Quite an eerie sound to this; I love it!

5: “Circle in the Sand” by Belinda Carlisle. I’ve always found this song to have a beautiful, haunting sound.

6: “The Voice” by Celtic Woman.  I imagine Celtic gods and goddesses, fairies and spirits, myths and legends when I listen to this.

7: “Scarborough Fair” by Simon and Garfunkel.  Another haunting track.

8: “Riverdance” performed for the first time at the Eurovision Song Contest in Dublin in 1994.  Everyone in Ireland was glued to their tv screens that evening. Little did we know that this 7 minute performance would have an everlasting effect on Irish culture and the way our country would be viewed all across the world.  I still get chills at 5.48 when the camera pans across their legs.

9: “End of the Night” by The Doors. Creepy, gloomy and unsettling, yet somehow still sexy.

10:”(Don’t Fear) The Reaper” by Blue Öyster Cult. A creepy classic.

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Film Review: The Awakening (Visually Stunning Haunted House Story)

What should a ghost debunker do when she actually sees a ghost? I’d suggest browsing the Classifieds for a new job.

Florence Cathcart (Rebecca Hall of The Town) is invited to investigate a possible haunting in a boys’ boarding school by Robert Mallory (Dominic West).  It’s 1921 in England and the after effects of the First World War are still being felt.  Cathcart is a sceptic (think Dana Scully from an earlier era) and is grieving for a man who was lost in the war.  She now busies herself with her work as a ghost debunker and author.  The untimely death of her parents when she was a child is most likely what led to her unusual choice of occupation, and we wonder exactly how they died.   Mallory has his own demons to battle; he still suffers physically and mentally from his time as a soldier.

The drama movies quickly from London to the bleak rural countryside, and a boys’ boarding school that reeks of loneliness, something Cathcart herself is all too familiar with.  She is introduced to Tom, an orphan of the school and the housekeeper Maud who are delighted to have her there.  It’s enjoyable to watch her set up the old-school ghost detection/people trapping gadgets around the house.  She immediately notices the bullying going on between the pupils, the brutality of one of the teachers and the abject loneliness of the place.

An overwhelmingly gloomy greyness seeps from the screen, effectively capturing the sense of an old-fashioned chiller movie.  Maud (Imelda Staunton) reminded me of the housekeeper from The Others, so I was suspicious of her right from the beginning.  The dreary weather and gloom of post-war England add to the unsettling atmosphere, and the costumes and hair styles are great, as you would expect of any good period drama.  Visually the film is flawless, but the pacing could have used some work.

The most disturbing scene in the film for me involved Cathcart and the doll house.  My nerves were on edge the entire time just waiting for something bad to happen.  I felt that Cathcart’s sanity started to unravel too quickly and the first half was much better than the second.   Around the hour mark I began to lose interest, but the actors’ skills kept me watching until the end.  I was expecting something a little more haunting from this film.  It had all the ingredients for an intriguing ghost story: the recent death of a child, a huge, country estate that looks like it should be haunted, the housekeeper that seems to know too much, a ghost hunter…but I didn’t love it.  The acting and setting were impressive, providing a chilling atmosphere, but the film was let down by a sloppy third act. ***

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