DBT #389 Haunting of the Blog - Throwback Thursday Macbeth's Witches

 


Macbeth captures evil with this trio of witches, here let's have Wikipedia tell you:

The Three Witches represent evil, darkness, chaos, and conflict, while their role is as agents and witnesses. They appear to have a warped sense of morality, deeming seemingly terrible acts to be moral, kind or right, such as helping one another to ruin the journey of a sailor. Their presence communicates treason and impending doom. During Shakespeare's day, witches were seen as worse than rebels, "the most notorious traitor and rebel that can be".[16] They were not only political traitors, but spiritual traitors as well. Much of the confusion that springs from them comes from their ability to straddle the play's borders between reality and the supernatural. They are so deeply entrenched in both worlds that it is unclear whether they control fate, or whether they are merely its agents. They defy logic, not being subject to the rules of the real world.[16]

The witches' lines in the first act, "Fair is foul, and foul is fair; / Hover through the fog and filthy air", are often said to set the tone for the remainder of the play by establishing a sense of moral confusion. Indeed, the play is filled with situations in which evil is depicted as good, while good is rendered evil. The line "Double, double toil and trouble," communicates the witches' intent clearly: they seek only to increase trouble for the mortals around them.[17]

Though the witches do not directly tell Macbeth to kill King Duncan, they use a subtle form of temptation when they inform Macbeth that he is destined to be king. By placing this thought in his mind, they effectively guide him on the path to his own destruction. This follows the pattern of temptation attributed to the Devil in the contemporary imagination: the Devil was believed to be a thought in a person's mind, which he or she might either indulge or reject. Macbeth indulges the temptation, while Banquo rejects it.[17]

Emily Scott Robinson captures their passion into a live theater piece, "Built on Bones" and back on Nov 10th 2022 I put a review together (Edition no. 133) of the six song EP.  Feel free to go throw yourself back to it because there is more to read there, or enjoy the studio music here in Bandcamp.


Or watch to your heart's passion, but bewared they are sirens.






Emily did such an excellent job composing these songs, I wish there was a reprise of some sort.

If you missed any of the weekly haunting. Here you go:











If you want to prepare yourself for Volume Four released Friday here are the past three volumes:









You could always decide to feed my music addiction of creepy music and donate to the cause.  If you did this week, I will spend it only on CREEPY music, and please recommend something.
#MusicHasNoExpirationDate #bestunknownmusicblog  #halloween  #creepysongs #curatedplaylist #compilations  #AdobeStockPhotos




The Top Four Posts Recently