You May Like This

at

Tara Nome Doyle – Caterpillar

Got the metamorphosis blues.

Berlin-based Irish-Norwegian singer/songwriter Tara Nome Doyle (top) channels her inner butterfly on the atmospheric new single from her forthcoming second album Værmin.

It comes with a cinematic video directed by Oliver Mohr and starring Helena Frost, Luna Schaller and Ilona Schulz.

Director Mohr writes:

“It is the warm voice of seduction that tries to gently pull us into the abyss in Tara’s ‘Caterpillar’. All songs on the album are named after insects and deal with topics that are often neglected in society. In public as well as in private. The Caterpillar video tells of three characters in dangerous social addictions.

“Off-screen hands give things to the characters. Presumed gifts, which only reinforce the characters in their dependency. While we observe them in their situations, the space around the characters narrows in the course of the story to a gentle cocoon of loneliness. Together they dream of breaking free from their fate and flying away.”

Nick says: On the wings of love.

Tara Nome Doyle

Sponsored Link

5 thoughts on “You May Like This

  1. TenPin Terry

    She appears singing in the new Jeremy Irons movie Munich: The Edge of War” on Netflix which is an absolute corker.
    Irons is in top form as Neville Chamberlain.

    1. Micko

      I really liked that flick

      Although it did feel like it was sponsored by the “See… Neville Chamberlain wasn’t stupid after all” foundation.

      1. paddy apathy

        Not having a pop at you here at all Micko, but these historical dramas blur fact and fiction and conflate and destroy and create new narratives to make plotlines more interesting for the viewer. What’s worse is a lot of people will take these things as accurate historical accounts.
        I will watch this movie as I haven’t been angry for a few weeks and the critics are have dubbed it “pos-washing” and revisionist which has piqued my interest.

        1. andrew

          Not being rude or funny like but I would doubt Micko’s knowledge of history is any greater than his knowledge of science or anything else for that matter.

Comments are closed.

Sponsored Link
Broadsheet.ie