
I AM THAT TEMPEST
Eve Libertine rages back into the spotlight with her wild interpretation of Penny Rimbaudâs poem âI Am That Tempestâ, which he describes as a âshowpiece for Eveâs staggering vocal rangeâ. Joined by a band of stellar musicians, Eve weaves herself around a forest of improvisational responses, making a mincemeat of conformist pretensions. âThe meaning is in the doing of it,â offers Rimbaud as some sort of an explanation, âitâs an itness rather than an ifness. It has its own lifeâ.Â
Libertine and Rimbaud have been pushing musical boundaries together ever since their now classic 70âs track, âReality Asylumâ, which introduced the avant-garde to the unlikely ears of Crassâ mainly punk audience. âI love working for and with Eve,â says Rimbaud, âher sense of inflection is second to none, and her ability to make sense of my sometimes-obscure lyrics somehow enables me to better understand the meanings of my own work. Muse?â he asks, âmaybe,â he responds, with a wry smile.
When asked to add to the above, Libertine came back with, âMad or what? Any think can be made sense of, itâs what we do in our daily struggle to make sense of the senseless. It allows us to wend our weary ways thinking that we belong here. But sometimes itâs good not to FIT but rather to FLY high amongst the clouds of senselessness where we can truly belongâ.Â
Eve Libertine is best known for her role as co-lead vocalist in Crass. Libertine wrote and performed most of the songs on the groupâs third album, âPenis Envyâ, which concentrated exclusively on feminist issues and featured only female voices.
Tracklist
1. Morning Session
2. Interlude feat. Penny Rimbaud
3. Afternoon Session
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Description
Eve Libertine rages back into the spotlight with her wild interpretation of Penny Rimbaudâs poem âI Am That Tempestâ, which he describes as a âshowpiece for Eveâs staggering vocal rangeâ. Joined by a band of stellar musicians, Eve weaves herself around a forest of improvisational responses, making a mincemeat of conformist pretensions. âThe meaning is in the doing of it,â offers Rimbaud as some sort of an explanation, âitâs an itness rather than an ifness. It has its own lifeâ.Â
Libertine and Rimbaud have been pushing musical boundaries together ever since their now classic 70âs track, âReality Asylumâ, which introduced the avant-garde to the unlikely ears of Crassâ mainly punk audience. âI love working for and with Eve,â says Rimbaud, âher sense of inflection is second to none, and her ability to make sense of my sometimes-obscure lyrics somehow enables me to better understand the meanings of my own work. Muse?â he asks, âmaybe,â he responds, with a wry smile.
When asked to add to the above, Libertine came back with, âMad or what? Any think can be made sense of, itâs what we do in our daily struggle to make sense of the senseless. It allows us to wend our weary ways thinking that we belong here. But sometimes itâs good not to FIT but rather to FLY high amongst the clouds of senselessness where we can truly belongâ.Â
Eve Libertine is best known for her role as co-lead vocalist in Crass. Libertine wrote and performed most of the songs on the groupâs third album, âPenis Envyâ, which concentrated exclusively on feminist issues and featured only female voices.
Tracklist
1. Morning Session
2. Interlude feat. Penny Rimbaud
3. Afternoon Session









