Obscure and difficult to find, 
Nature & Organisation's 
Beauty Reaps the Blood of Solitude is likely to be filed in the 
experimental category of independent record stores. Though by no means accessible, the album is actually quite easy to listen to. With this project, multi-instrumentalist 
Michael Cashmore recruited 
David Tibet and 
Steve Stapleton to create a textured, somber record that evokes 
chamber music gone mad and the 
medieval, much like 
Tibet's band 
Current 93. With violins, cellos, flutes, and bassoons driving the melodies, the album can seem subtle, even relaxing, and 
Strawberry Switchblade's 
Rose McDowell's vocals on songs like 
"Wicker Man Song" surprisingly could fit in at 
the Lilith Fair. But the real otherworldly strength comes from 
Tibet's voice, with which he applies as much venom and wonder as in his 
Current 93 work, to visions, "idiotic faces and swollen hearts," crows, wolves, horsemen, green fields, zodiac signs -- all things displaced from the Dark Ages. 
Tibet always seems mysterious, an alchemist, a little frightening and cryptic. On 
"Bloodstreamruns" he sings, "God walked the earth in those days/Now still in my Hearts, He walks still." With vocals by the similar though less dark 
Douglas P., 
"My Black Diary" seems triumphant. But 
Beauty Reaps the Blood of Solitude is a strange album. It's timeless and perhaps unlike anything else but 
Current 93. ~ Charles Spano