Hi, everybody!

Crimsoncrow

New member
My name is Daniel Eliseev. I am a musician from Bulgaria. Progressive rock, fusion, jazz, experimental and classical music are my favorite styles. I am known as a band member of Travelhouse in the album "Mind Mapping" 2008 -
http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=4410
Also I was represented as a guest musician in the first solo album of Kalin Tonev - " Machine Years" 2017 - http://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=54210
At the present time I am a member of Prog-Rock Tribute Bulgaria and also I am working with my band Daniel Eliseev Project - https://www.danieleliseev.com/
For me will be very useful and exciting to discuss everything for the value music with the other members of the forum.

Keep on prog-rockin' !
 

Krummhorn

Administrator
Staff member
ADMINISTRATOR
:wave: Welcome aboard, Daniel.

We sincerely hope that you will enjoy your time here making new acquaintances and generally enlarging your knowledge of music.
 

Crimsoncrow

New member
:wave: Welcome aboard, Daniel.

We sincerely hope that you will enjoy your time here making new acquaintances and generally enlarging your knowledge of music.
Thanks for the warm welcome! The music is my passion and I am sure that here I am in the right place with opportunities to contact with right people.
 

John Watt

Member
Daniel! I listened to your nylon string guitar playing and the song preview.
There are some very original vocals, very musical, very interesting.

Now, here you are in your homeland, making songs in English.
I have to say, to be real with you, that the English on your site has bad language.
The lines also break up your name, when it should be together.
That's just font talk, but that's all I've got to show you, right now.
 

Crimsoncrow

New member
Daniel! I listened to your nylon string guitar playing and the song preview.
There are some very original vocals, very musical, very interesting.

Now, here you are in your homeland, making songs in English.
I have to say, to be real with you, that the English on your site has bad language.
The lines also break up your name, when it should be together.
That's just font talk, but that's all I've got to show you, right now.

Hi, John Watt and thanks a lot for the attention, for the nice words and also for your honest and constructive criticism! For me is real pleasure and grate oportunity to share my music with true melomans and musicians.
Greetings!
 

John Watt

Member
Crimsoncrow! You could say I'm a mellow man, if that's what you mean,
even if I'm not sure I'm a musician any more, not playing in a band for a long time.

I went for a long distance bike-hike, out all day and night, passing through Niagara Falls.
Here's a photo of the water that's creating the electricity I'm using.

I'm going to have to look up modern day Bulgaria to see what's happening.
 

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Ella Beck

Member
My name is Daniel Eliseev. I am a musician from Bulgaria. Progressive rock, fusion, jazz, experimental and classical music are my favorite styles. I am known as a band member of Travelhouse in the album "Mind Mapping" 2008 -
http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=4410
Also I was represented as a guest musician in the first solo album of Kalin Tonev - " Machine Years" 2017 - http://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=54210
At the present time I am a member of Prog-Rock Tribute Bulgaria and also I am working with my band Daniel Eliseev Project - https://www.danieleliseev.com/
For me will be very useful and exciting to discuss everything for the value music with the other members of the forum.

Keep on prog-rockin' !

It all sounds very interesting. Hope you're enjoying your music.
 

John Watt

Member
Crimsoncrow! I'm drawn to this thread like a Goth to a Bulgarian flame, or campfire.
You're getting some replies here, and I have something to say to keep it going.

I can see you are promoting your music, something I've never tried to do here.
I'm here to be entertained as much as learning, and this domain is not only originated in Denmark,
for me it's far far way over the Atlantic Ocean. Any interest in me here could only be that,
unless someone mailed me plane tickets with a big cheque for expenses.
I also don't use any online currency or have digital finances I can use to send money.

That's being honest with you, not trying to hold you back.
You musical ability makes you a very interesting member,
and being able to share ourselves here can only improve our understandings.
So I'm encouraging you to think of Magle.dk as a friend, a musical home away from home,
a new place for you to find your own head space, to see if your personal horizons can expand.

I got into it with one of the lead guitarists from TINKICKER, a Danish band.
He mailed me their latest CD, something I treasure.
I felt compelled to mail him a very rare CD, a copy of a recording a Montreal radio DJ made.
That was Gino Vanelli when he first was touring as a live act, a three-piece,
his one brother on synthesizers with a hired drummer.
Listening to TINKICKERs' music page made me think of Gino, as strong a masculine voice,
just not as melodic. When Soren wrote back to me, he said they listened to it and got into it.
I'm sure you've heard of Prince. His first album has the same synth sounds and chord breaks,
that Gino Vanelli first used. I met Gino when he first came to audition for agents in Toronto.
I always like talking about that.

anyway... I like to see bright font shining from this screen, anonymous voices from around the world,
with comments and insight that take me away, and improve my mind, the music... the photos...
I did look up Bulgaria, not knowing if you are of Slavic ancestry, but you sure have a rousing national anthem.
I started a thread in general debates, with a title "New Zealand 60, Canada 1....."
That became posting replies about important news that could change all of our lives.
I hope you have something you can say about Bulgaria, known for art and music and culture,
not about weapons of mass destruction. I'm looking across the American border every day.
That's not good.
 

Crimsoncrow

New member
I apologize for the late answer, but I had password problems! First I want to say that Bulgaria is a small country and does not have weapons of mass destruction.
As a whole, Bulgarians are a tolerant people, and on the territory of the country coexist peacefully different nationalities and religious denominations. In Bulgaria there are many historical monuments of Thracian culture - one of the ancient civilizations that coexisted with the ancient Hellenes. As for the cultural heritage, we do not have any exceptional contribution in the world, but the Slavic alphabet was created and developed in the lands of the old Bulgarian kingdom and then spread among other Slavic peoples. Also Bulgarian folk music is well known in much of the world with its unequal rhythms. A Bulgarian folk song was featured in the golden vinyl sent to space with spacecraft Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 as a musical message from the planet Earth to unknown civilizations in the distant cosmos.

Thanks for the opportunity to be part of this forum and also to share as an independent artist and my own music!
 

John Watt

Member
And elderpiano, I'd like to double your comment, and tell Crimsoncrow that was a very interesting reply.

Crimsoncrow! There are Sons and Daughters of the Gael who speak Gaelic, pre-Scot natives.
That's the language of the Garden of Eden, the first tribe to flee Roman oppression and move up north.
Bay-an-uck-let, blessings on you.
My mothers' older sister remarried in Canada after her husband died, and she married Joseph Csuka, a Hungarian man.
I have many Slavic friends, a community of them here in the Niagara Peninsula,
but as soon as I saw Thracian I knew what you are saying.
Look at what can only be called a long, unpleated kilt, that long skirt with tartan, even tatar, squares.

Scottish people are other people from the mainland who came to our island to leave the Dark Ages behind,
and the Holy Roman Empire and their Inquisitions.
When other people came over to take away what they had, they fought back and united as Scottish people.
This small island has absorbed a lot of ancestries and did repel the Roman and Holy Roman Empires.

I'm sitting here typing and humming along with the song from above, it sounds so natural for me.
And it wasn't a battle song, what my father would put on Sunday morning to roust us up for church.
For us, bagpipes are a weapon of war, meant to stir the blood of your enemies,
and if you heard them, you know your blood could be shed.
The first time I heard "Amazing Grace" played with bagpipes I knew something was changing in the world.
Now I feel sad, because that's when our ancestral pipes come out to be played by a Master Piper.
Clan funerals.
 
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