Audio Track
[Genre: Blues Metal / Gothic Blues / Dark Doom Blues] [Tempo: 61 BPM] [Key: E Minor] [Instrumentation: Smoky blues guitar, Hammond organ, upright bass, slow heavy drums, slide guitar, piano accents, occasional cello] [Intro] [Low Contralto: E3–G3, smoky, weary, intimate] The bottle waits where you left it Dust gathered on the glass Another century has drifted by Another one has passed The tavern closed a hundred years ago The patrons all moved on Yet I still raise a lonely toast To someone long since gone [Verse 1] [Contralto: E3–B3, warm chest voice, slow blues phrasing] I drank with kings and vagabonds With sailors and with thieves I've heard a thousand broken hearts Invent a thousand griefs They spoke of wounds that time would heal Of sorrows destined to fade But none of them were cursed to watch The centuries parade The wine grew old inside the cask The barrel turned to dust Yet every memory of you Refused to fade with rust [Pre-Chorus] [Contralto: G3–D4, restrained ache, building tension] The living drink to celebrate The dying drink to cope The deathless drink because they know How little remains of hope [Chorus] [Full Contralto: B3–E4, rich chest-dominant delivery, expressive blues vibrato] Immortal tears taste of wine Dark and bittersweet A vintage aged by endless years And wounds that never sleep Immortal tears taste of wine Poured from a broken heart The bottle empties every night But the loneliness never departs [Instrumental Break] [Slide guitar solo with mournful bends] [Organ swells beneath sustained minor chords] [Verse 2] [Contralto: E3–C4, reflective storytelling tone] The vineyards where we used to walk Have vanished from the earth The hills were swallowed long ago By cities of newer birth The songs we sang beneath the stars No longer fill the air Yet sometimes when the night is still I almost hear them there I keep your glass beside my own Untouched through all these years A monument to vanished days And oceans made of tears [Pre-Chorus] [Contralto: G3–D4, increasing emotional intensity] I've learned that memory ferments Like wine beneath the stone Growing stronger in the darkness The longer it's left alone [Chorus] [Full Contralto: B3–E4, stronger projection] Immortal tears taste of wine Dark and bittersweet A vintage aged by endless years And wounds that never sleep Immortal tears taste of wine Poured from a broken heart The bottle empties every night But the loneliness never departs [Bridge] [Low Contralto: D3–A3, fragile, nearly spoken] I used to fear forgetting you More than I feared the grave But now I fear remembering Every detail that remains [Instrumentation drops to piano and organ] The curve of your smile The sound of your laugh The warmth within your hand The cruelest thing about forever Is how clearly it understands [Gradual Crescendo] [Contralto: A3–E4, rising anguish] That love was never meant to live Beyond a mortal span Yet here I stand with empty years And an overflowing glass [Musical Climax] [Heavy blues-metal riff enters] [Cello and organ create a massive, mournful atmosphere] [Final Chorus] [Powerful Contralto: B3–G4, maximum emotional intensity] Immortal tears taste of wine Older than empires lost Older than forgotten gods And every bridge I've crossed Immortal tears taste of wine Still burning down my throat A toast to all we might have been And every word you wrote Immortal tears taste of wine As the final stars decline The universe may run out of time Before I drink you from my mind [Outro] [Low Contralto: E3–G3, exhausted, fading] The bottle's empty The room is cold The night has grown divine Yet somehow... The tears still fall... And still... Taste of wine... [Slide guitar slowly fades into silence] [Organ sustains final E minor chord] [End]
Velvet Eternity’s Immortal Tears Taste of Wine reads like a century‑drunk elegy, casting immortality as a curse that refines pain rather than easing it. The extended metaphor is meticulous: bottles, barrels, and casks become vessels for grief, while “memory ferments beneath the stone,” growing stronger in darkness. The refrain sutures the theme—immortal tears taste of wine—turning each toast into a ritual of remembrance where time fails to dilute the ache. The lyric arc expands from an abandoned tavern and a kept, untouched glass to a cosmic horizon—older than empires, forgotten gods, even the last light of stars—transforming private mourning into a philosophy of eternal loss. The pivot—fearing remembering more than forgetting—lands as the song’s most devastating paradox.
Musically, the blueprint is a 61 BPM, E minor Gothic blues: smoky guitar, Hammond organ, upright bass, and slide phrases that eventually crest into a heavy blues‑metal riff, with cello and organ massing like storm fronts. A dark, chest‑dominant contralto in a Southern accent carries the narrative from E3’s intimate murmur to G4’s haunted authority, matching the lyric’s slow-burn crescendo. The arrangement choices—mournful bends, sustained minor swells, and that late, crushing riff—mirror the text’s thesis: the bottle empties nightly, but the sorrow keeps pouring, a vintage that refuses to run dry.