Princess Goes To The Butterfly Museum. CREDIT: Bonnie Biess/Getty
Michael C. Hall’s band Princess Goes To The Butterfly Museum have shared a new track called ‘Armageddon Suite’.
The
Lazarus stage show, is set to release his debut album with the new-wave trio on March 26.
Titled ‘Thanks For Coming’, the forthcoming record will also feature the previously released songs ‘Cruel World’ and ‘Eat An Eraser’.
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“‘Armageddon Suite’ is about having a more heightened romantic sense facilitated by the world ending,” Hall explained in a statement.
The track’s official video finds Hall and his bandmates (Matt Katz-Bohen and Peter Yanowitz) driving down country roads and through woodland. You can watch the clip above.
Michael C. Hall and His Bandmates Discuss His New Princess Goes to the Butterfly Museum Album
By Tom Lanham | January 13, 2021 | 10:45am
Photo by Paul Storey
Six Feet Under and the friendly neighborhood serial-killer saga
Dexter plus live-theater stints in
Cabaret,
Hedwig and The Angry Inch, and David Bowie’s
Lazarus the North Carolina-born thespian has learned that every picture does, indeed, tell a story, so he put a great deal of thought and effort into finding the perfect photograph to adorn the cover of
Thanks For Coming, the debut album from his new alt-rock outfit, Princess Goes to the Butterfly Museum. Reflecting the sonically lush, lyrically bleak songs inside such as “Bombed Out Sites,” “Eat an Eraser,” a grim cover of Phantogram’s “Cruel World” and symphonic new single “Armageddon Suite” the meticulously-selected shot features a windswept entrance to a once-bustling shopping center, now dark, ominous and foreboding. At first glance
5 Things to Do in D.C. This Week (and beyond)
From Bowie birthday bashes to performances at Wolf Trap, here are our picks for the week.
The David Rubenstein Show
The late, beloved liberal Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is featured in the third season premiere of this nationally distributed public television talk show featuring wide-ranging, often provocative one-on-one conversations with some of today’s most successful leaders and prominent figures in business, government, arts and entertainment, sports, technology, and beyond.
Philanthropist David Rubenstein, the Chairman of the Kennedy Center, hosts the show, asking frank questions of his guests as they talk about their personal and professional choices and explore their paths to success.
A musical fable by David Bowie, a Philip Glass piano sonata and a salute to a legendary Broadway composer lead our weekly list of online concerts, streaming theater productions, virtual art exhibitions and other culture for your viewing consideration this weekend. Here’s our latest rundown, all times Pacific.
David Bowie’s “Lazarus”
David Bowie would have been 74 on Friday. You can mark that occasion, as well as the fifth anniversary of his death on Sunday, with a one-weekend-only streaming of a 2016 London performance of this musical with “Dexter’s” Michael C. Hall. “Lazarus” was built on classic Bowie tunes and inspired by the 1976 sci-fi film “The Man Who Fell to Earth,” in which Bowie starred. 6 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 1 p.m. Sunday. $21.50. dice.fm