The Mercury Program - Sultans Of El Sur video free download


77,936
Duration: 05:43
Uploaded: 2009/11/03

Sultans Of El Sur from "A Data Learn The Language" album!

Comments

8 years ago

DeztMusic !

Amazing music, beautiful.

9 years ago

Bronze fish

My favorite is the last little guitar parts. Where its all quiet and beautiful.

9 years ago

Rickey Rodgers

one of my all time favorite bands and favorite song

10 years ago

Tom Faine

Can you post " a crusading theme " by them?? Thanks!

10 years ago

Via Luna Band

If you like TMP, give us a listen! 

10 years ago

dr05guitar

This made me laugh...thx

10 years ago

What Doth Life

This is EASILY one of my all-time favorite songs.

11 years ago

TheProletarius

Math me !

11 years ago

José Marin

Ryan barret bio, in props 49 :) bmx4ever

11 years ago

Slow Down

the same here!

11 years ago

Nathaniel Noton-Freeman

Man. That was it.

11 years ago

DoctorSess

Math is the language of the universe. Music is the universal language.

12 years ago

hoosier9009

Math rock? This song is in 6/4 for most of it (or 3/4, 6/8, 3/8, same thing..) then it changes all the time to 4/4 to 2/4 (4/8,2/8,8/8, same thing once again..) plus each note has specific values..No matter how much I dislike math, music IS math. ALL MUSIC.

12 years ago

MadPosturaCity9

@MadPosturaCity9: Likewise, if I were nitpicking, then I could easily say that both genres are a form of progressive rock. This is because they both attempt to move beyond Rock music while still using it as a basic foundation. In my opinion; Bands like Can, or This Heat share many of the characteristic math-rock/post-rock elements, but before the terms came into use. I love it, Ozric Tentacles are Psychedelic Rock, or whatever. Can they fit into Post-rock/Math-rock though? Maybe.

12 years ago

MadPosturaCity9

Post-rock, AND Math-rock are two sides of a certain stylistic coin. I'd say the three bands I personally use as a measuring stick are: Tortoise, Don Caballero, and Shellac. Not meaning to leave out the similar groups from that same time, or groups that may have pioneered said styles (i.e. Talk talk for Post-rock, or Fred Frith's Massacre for Math-rock). It's just that those three bands kind of span the elements of both genres in a time when those styles were in full bloom.

12 years ago

David Hegarty

Love this jam!

12 years ago

Gerald Leslie

Solid. Cheers

12 years ago

bbeaup

this is mathy. maybe not tera melos mathy, but you can't deny it. it's not the tapping sections either.

12 years ago

oldstories89

This one brings back so many memories... Always gonna love a data learn the language, definitely in my top 10 records of all time.

12 years ago

Matt-Math Rock

@kklol0 math IS music. there is always math in music and always music in math. its the way the universe is yo

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