Songs of the Desolate Ones Liste des pistes | Composition du groupe | Menu de navigation

Album musical sorti en 1999Album de Mephistopheles


projets correspondantsBlack metal1999






Songs of The Desolate Ones est un album de Black metal du groupe allemand Mephistopheles, sorti en 1999.



Liste des pistes |


  1. A Desolation Hymn

  2. Kurgan Supremacy

  3. Twilight Shore (Lucifer's Fall And Rise)

  4. Opaque Fortress

  5. Moldavian Fires

  6. Across Oceans Of Time

  7. Northern Eternity


Composition du groupe |



  • chanteur: Nordischer Künstler


  • Guitariste: Jury Kowalczyk


  • Guitariste: Hanno Weihe


  • Synthétiseur: Nordischer Künstler, Detlef Wiedecke


  • Bassiste: Garvin Bösch


  • batteur: Selphratus

  • Portail du metal Portail du metal

Popular posts from this blog

Isabella Eugénie Boyer Biographie | Références | Menu de navigationmodifiermodifier le codeComparator to Compute the Relative Value of a U.S. Dollar Amount – 1774 to Present.

Join wedge with single bond in chemfigHow to make only one part of double bond bold with chemfig?Crossing bonds in chemfigjoining atoms in chemfig. Two adjacent molculesHow do I selectively change bond length in chemfig?Ugly bond joints in chemfigchemfig: reaction above arrowUsing the mhchem and chemfig packages in conjunctionBonding to specific element letter using chemfigResonance hybrids in chemfigScale chemfig molecule in beamer with tikzWhy does this chemfig bond with a hook start in the middle of the atom?

Should we avoid writing fiction about historical events without extensive research?How do we write a story about genocide committed by a fascist government without falling into the “Nazi Germany” cliché?Researching sensitive subjectsShould I avoid “lecturing” my readers?Archetypical/popular historical fictionHow to write a “strong” passage?Will what worked 'back then' work today? (Novels)Historical Fiction: using you and thouHow do you make characters relatable if they exist in a completely different moral context?How do I write a MODERN combat/violence scene without being dry?Fictionizing firsthand accounts from history?Is it possible to narrate a novel in a faux-historical style without alienating the reader?