Paul Ramey’s “The Snow Queen” Original Music Soundtrack Premieres in St. Augustine!
by Paul on Jan.07, 2010, under News
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Paul Ramey’s original musical score for Theatre Saint Augustine’s production of “The Snow Queen” will be premiering for the next three weekends (Friday and Saturday at 8pm, Jan. 8-9, 15-16, and 22-23) at Holiday Inn on the Beach in St. Augustine. Paul’s original music soundtrack for this unique adaptation of the Hans Christian Andersen classic is an enchanting addition to the beloved story, and CDs of the soundtrack will be on sale at the shows.
Visit www.theatresaintaugustine.com for more details and to purchase advance tickets! See you there!!
Next up…The Snow Queen!
by Paul on Nov.20, 2009, under Uncategorized
I’ve just been commissioned to do an original musical score for Theatre Saint Augustine’s January production of Hans Christian Andersen’s The Snow Queen! The music will be available on a limited-edition CD around the same time. Stay tuned for more details…
Pieces On Me - A History
by Paul on Oct.16, 2009, under Veil & Subdue Background
In 1995 I was living in a farmhouse outside of Lexington , KY. I was still recovering from the end of a long-term relationship the year previous, and I found the calm of the countryside to be a welcome refuge. There were four of us total living in the farmhouse, and it inevitably became a makeshift creative commune. I embraced it.
It was that winter, alone in my tiny bedroom, warmed by my quaint, one-log fireplace, that I began to focus more seriously on music. With microphone propped on top of my Casio keyboard, and Tascam 4-track cassette recorder on standby, I began composing and recording. I proceeded in the direction of some of my favorite influences at the time: The Cure, Bauhaus, Christian Death, Siouxsie and others. Not surprisingly, the recordings from this time-period were thick with layers of reverb and echo, and the lyrics were all inevitably maudlin in some way or other.
I was recording under the name Candle back then, and created “album” tapes from time to time to give away to friends. The tape that I was working on then was a 90-minute work entitled Dismal Hollow. It is there that the song Pieces On Me first appeared.
In the years since, I’ve considered dusting Pieces On Me off and re-recording it. It was in the final days of working on Veil & Subdue that I realized that I needed a “song of frustration” from the female character Semele’s boyfriend, Colin. Almost immediately, Pieces On Me arose in my memory, demanding a new life. Sure enough, with a few tweaks to the lyrics it fit perfectly into the context of the V&S story arc. It proved to be the perfect lift into the final act, actually, as well as is one of the few straight-up rockers on the album.
Veil & Subdue Review! St. Augustine Record, Oct. 4, 2009
by Paul on Oct.04, 2009, under Uncategorized
Veil & Subdue
By Kara Pound
“Two local musicians conceptualize goth-rock opera”
Local theatre co-founder and musician, Paul Ramey, can’t pinpoint his inspiration. “All of my life I’ve been influenced by concept albums,” he said referring to the similarity of Pink Floyd’s “The Wall” to his new goth-rock opera CD, “Veil & Subdue,” in which he wrote and performed most of the songs. “It’s a whole album telling a story.” Along with concept albums, Ramey’s work is also inspired by Greek mythology, Neil Gaiman’s dark comic book series, “Sandman,” and, most interestingly, a close friend’s nightly brush with a phenomenon called, “night terrors.”
Anna K. Meade, Ramey’s good friend for nearly a decade and fellow Theatre Saint Augustine co-founder, has experienced these medical and psychological episodes for most of her life. “This is not a very well understood phenomenon,” Ramey said. “There isn’t much help out there and it’s very debilitating.” Night terrors are explained as when a person is abruptly awoken from sleep to extreme terror and the temporary inability to regain full consciousness. Gasping, moaning and/or screaming can also accompany them.
“Instead of a medical explanation, I wanted to look at a possible mythic, god-like cause for night terrors,” Ramey said of the storyline for the opera in which he co-wrote with Meade. The two were curious about the mythological undertones of the episodes back two or three thousand years ago when there weren’t necessarily medical explanations for such things. They also always knew that they wanted to collaborate on a creative project together.
The result is a two-disc, 22-song rock-goth opera that chronicles the ill-fated love between the god of dreams (Morpheus) and a mortal woman. The self-funded, three-year-long project, classified by Ramey as darkwave or “a wide range of musical sounds with a gothic edge,” was recently released on his own label, Masque Records – ensuring total creative control.
Meade and Ramey have always had grand aspirations for their project – wishing that one day, it will grace a stage or screen. “The hope from the beginning,” Ramey said, “is to create a complete work and do as much as we can to make it real . . . so that someone theatrically trained can put [the production] on.” With recent success of their Theatre Saint Augustine productions like “Private Lives,” the two may not have to wait too long to see their dream become a reality.
Veil & Subdue is for sale locally at Needful Thingz, 215 W King St., and Music Matters, 196 SR 312, and online at www.veilandsubdue.com.
© The St. Augustine Record
See the review: http://staugustine.com/stories/100409/community_2027756.shtml
Marc Almond - “Orpheus In Exile” Music Review
by Paul on Sep.27, 2009, under Night Terrors, Thoughts
If you live in the United States, chances a better than not that the last thing you heard from Marc Almond was via Soft Cell, who gave us that wonderful early 80s technopop masterpiece: their splendid cover of “Tainted Love.” However, if that’s all you know of Marc then you’ve missed out on one of the more eclectic, misunderstood, dynamic solo careers in music today. The last 30 years may not have been kind to Marc Almond if you judge his work only by top ten smash hits (although he did have a number one in the UK with 1987’s “Something’s Gotten Hold of My Heart”), but Marc has nonetheless been very kind to his loyal fans, giving them a steady stream of romantic, dynamic works that span a rainbow of delicious, exotic genres.
“Orpheus In Exile: Songs of Vadim Kozin” is the newest bold brushstroke on his ever-expanding musical canvas. “Orpheus” is actually the second of Almond’s forays into the Russian musical landscape, the first being his recent “Heart On Snow” album. But where “Heart On Snow” provided a wonderful overview of beloved songs from that country, “Orpheus” narrows the focus on “Russian Orpheus” Vadin Kozin, a singer/songwriter who, though immensely popular in his day, was largely swept away in Stalinist paranoia and general homophobia of the early 20th Century, to be largely lost in the fraying edges of an evolving Soviet state.
I absolutely love this album! Those familiar with Maurice Jarre’s classic “Doctor Zhivago” soundtrack will be delighted to find similar textures: snow-laced gypsy strings and aching accordians which, from the first note, transport the listener into the forgotten Russian-edged French Chanson style of music.
The album starter, “Boulevards Of Magadan,” whispers of the dark ache of being captive in a faraway cold land, with only a longing for distant Paris feuling the soul (Kozin would know; he was himself imprisoned in a gulog in far away Magadan for many years). From there Marc hand-picks songs of love and passion: the up-tempo “Forgotten Tango,” the sad farewell of “My Fire,” the violin-laced “I Love So Much To Look Into Your Eyes,” “Friendship” and “Brave Boy” make no mistake as to the depth of Kozin’s desires. Sweetly veiled yet equally overt at times, Marc’s selection does much to bring Kozin out of the closet of yesterday to reveal what must be considered Russia’s first gay icon.
The most devastating number must be “Beggar,” the sad story of the life of an old beggar woman on the streets. Once an enchanteuse with “beauty staggering”, she is now lost forever to advanced age and destitute poverty. Followed by the painful but sweet “When Youth Becomes A Memory,” one can be sure that Marc’s contemplations on the changes that come with age are very personal. And, yes, if anyone remembers the song “Youth” from Soft Cell’s very first album, these selections can be especially poignant!
Orpheus is a grand gesture from Marc: he has never been in better vocal form, and his reserved, subtle stylings hit just the right flavour to match the exquisite orchestral production of collaborator Alexei Fedorov and The Rossia Orchestra Ensemble. And by the way, it’s worth noting that “Orpheus” also features some of the most beautiful CD packaging I’ve seen in a long time. The cover art is what I would describe as a turn-of-the-century poster lithograph, with minimal colors which are slightly offset from each other to create the illusion of a quickly manufactured concert poster. It’s bold and dramatic and very Russian, it captures well what awaits inside.
For someone like Marc, who has made no pretense of his love and fascination of fame and image, there’s no mistaking who the real star of this album is - Vadim shines through on every song, and I give great credit to Marc that he does not get in the way of his subject matter. It’s a delicate line, and Marc proves to be a surprisingly sublime master. It’s a very long way indeed from the often over-the-top Jacques Brel covers of old!
“Orpheus In Exile” is clearly a labour of love. It’s a sublime album that captures the soul of a man much loved in his day, eventually forgotten to most, blacklisted because of his passions, but prolific until the end. As such Vadim Kozin can well be considered a perfect reflection of Marc.
Review my CD! The Veil & Subdue exposure quest continues…
by Paul on Sep.08, 2009, under Uncategorized
Hi guys! So, I’ve mostly been “hitting the internet streets” with Veil for the past week or two, sending email letters as well as mailing out hard copies of the CD, inviting various online goth zines to check out the stuff and maybe do a review. So far have gotten some good responses, and even some inquiries about the eventual stage production! I’m also scheduled to be interviewed for St. Augustine, Florida’s newspaper weekly entertainment insert, Compass, in the next day or two, which I’m very much looking forward to. Local exposure is very exciting!
Veil & Subdue review! - Folio Weekly, August 18, 2009
by Paul on Aug.21, 2009, under News, Uncategorized

Veil & Subdue review! - Folio Weekly, August 18, 2009
Ad Published…No Response!
by Paul on Jul.14, 2009, under News
So I’m learning that placing an advertisement in a national magazine is not enough to drive sales. Gothic Beauty has been out for about a month now, and that nice 1/4 page ad I placed in there has produced NOT ONE SALE. This magazine has a distribution of 27,000! You’d think the odds alone would guarantee me a few curious people with 20 bucks to spend, but nope!
So, I still have a lot to learn, and a lot of work to do to get this thing out there in front of people enough that they want to own the Veil & Subdue journey. I am doing research even as we speak on said techniques, and will be instigating these forthwith…
In the meantime, good responses from those who HAVE bought the CD, so that’s nice anyway… ;^)
Michael Jackson, Lord of Goth. R.I.P.
by Paul on Jun.26, 2009, under Thoughts, Uncategorized
In the midst of analyzing Michael Jackson’s legacy to music in general – and specifically to how he paved the way in crossing the “black/white” barrier in many areas of entertainment – I wanted to point out one other music genre that he was the first to cross: Goth music.
Michael was pop and funk and flash, but he was arguably also one of the first mainstream entertainers (let alone one of African-American descent) to bring the camp/horror aspects of Goth music into the radios and TVs of mainstream America. For what else would you call the song and accompanying mini-movie-video called Thriller, a work of entertainment that dealt not only with a metamorphosis into a werewolf-like creature (“I’m not like other boys,” he said to his unsuspecting date), but also included a sublime and chilling narration from the Late Goth god Vincent Price as well?
That Michael was aware of the line he was walking is evidenced in the warning he insisted be included at the beginning of the video; that he basically didn’t go for all that occultish stuff, and that he was sorry for scaring everyone. Wink!
Michael may have been the King of Pop, but he was also a Lord of Goth…camouflaged in red jacket and sequined glove. Hell, how could someone who owned “Elephant Man” John Merrick’s bones not be Goth? The lad was dark, my friends.
As we say goodbye to the man and embrace the eternal myth…let us give proper respects to a man who safely and deftly brought a slice of good old-fashioned Goth sensibility to the masses.
You will be missed.
Veil & Subdue Update
by Paul on May.21, 2009, under Events, News
Long belated update! Where have I been, you ask? Well, took some time off to get married to the lovely Tina Huggins, who is MASQUE’s resident videographer, photographer, and Veil & Subdue’s own Femme de la Morte! Now she is all mine!!
The CD is now selling briskly, and hopefully the quarter-page ad in Gothic Beauty magazine #28 will pull in a more expansive audience. I’m quite pleased with the whole final package - DiscMakers did an outstanding job of manufacturing the whole thing, and call me particular but I’m especially pleased with the varnish they put on the outer packaging - feels almost like leather, and looks dark and frosty. And of course their final mastering really took the whole thing over the top. I’m truly blown away to have the final product in my hands, and on shelves, and online!!
Locally, just wrapped up an interview for an article about Veil & Subdue which will appear in the local free press paper, Folio Weekly. Now I just need to find some time to run these CDs around to some more stores, including down to Orlando where the goth undercurrent is much more lively.
Now that sales are underway, the next project for the CD is to create a video for the veilandsubdue.com website, as well as for YouTube, etc. I believe the song will be Bed of Ashes, and I have a few ideas brewing for that.
Well, that’s all for now. Hold your candle high in the dark, and buy a CD if you haven’t already!! ;^D
Paul
