What happens when Tolkien’s world, Enya’s music, and cutting-edge virtual performance collide?
In this episode, we explore a breathtaking Second Life film that reimagines “May It Be” as a haunting, hopeful journey through shadow and light. From gothic landscapes and cinematic lighting to an unexpectedly intimate motion-capture reveal, this episode showcases how virtual worlds can deliver not just spectacle, but genuine emotional resonance.
If you love:
- Lord of the Rings and its timeless theme of hope against darkness
- Machinima and virtual cinematography at its most poetic
- Innovative uses of facial mocap and performance in online worlds
- Discovering undiscovered creative voices with serious talent
…then you won’t want to miss this.
We dive into a strikingly beautiful piece of Second Life machinima: Anna Kurka’s cinematic cover of Enya’s “May It Be” from The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. Tracy brings the pick, introducing Anna as a Belgium-based virtual performer who blends singing, storytelling, and atmospheric world-building into emotionally rich visual journeys.
Set in the hauntingly gothic Second Life region “Infinite Darkness,” the film pairs slow, ethereal fly-throughs of ancient forests, ruins, mist, and light with a tender, intimate vocal performance. The hosts explore how the imagery echoes Tolkien’s core themes of darkness and hope, fear and resilience, the liminal space between night and dawn, and how Anna’s more human, grounded interpretation contrasts with Enya’s otherworldly original.
The discussion also turns technical, with a spoiler-friendly deep dive into the surprise ending: a remarkably convincing facial motion-capture performance inside Second Life, raising fascinating questions about virtual production, real-time mocap, and how far user-generated platforms have evolved.
Along the way, the panel reflects on Tolkien’s enduring emotional power, the courage it takes to reinterpret iconic music, and the often-hidden talent within virtual worlds that deserves a much wider audience.
Audio Only Version of this Episode
YouTube Version of this Episode
Show Notes & Links
May It Be – Lord of the Rings | Enya Cover by Anna Kurka (Second Life Machinima) released 5 October 2025
Enya – May It Be (Official Lyric Video) released on YouTube on 31 July 2020
Tracy had a chance to ask Anna about her work in Second Life, and she graciously wrote me a few answers. I’ll copy the interview on our show notes for those interested in hearing more about Anna and her approach –
TH: How did you get into machinima? How long have you been singing in SL? Why songs and why machinima in SL?
AK: Actually, I got into singing first. I was just an amateur singing in the shower and such. I started singing around the summer of 2024 & I was talking to someone in SL which does actual live shows on SL (possible through the use of shoutcast, in the world of Second Life) and I told him I like to sing but I’m too scared to do anything with it in “real life”. So he told me to maybe sing as my virtual avatar “Anna Kurka” instead. So I did.
I sang karaoke cover styles and posted it on youtube with just static images or a little bit of moving images. He helped me to sing better along the way. My real life partner actually told me “why don’t you do video clips?”…. So that is how I got into machinima!
One of my videos tells me the background on how I got started like that
“Anna’s World” tells how I started singing and how I created “Let You Down”.
TH: Why do covers? Have you done originals?
AK: I started out with covers because it is easy, just take a karaoke track and go to town! After a while I did try my hand at an original as well, it is on a seperate channel though. I’m not really that good at using a DAW/Sequencer and making my own music, but I sure tried! What I also do is take an existing song and just take the lyrics & rewrite the music – to make it my own. (Like on “Let You Down”) – On “Little Flower”, I actually took a fully instrumental track and added my own lyrics.
Original track: Echoes of Time:
TH: Do you do this in real life, etc (or do you sing in virtual concerts)?
AK: So far no, I like being hidden behind my avatar & nobody really knows who I really am. It is safe & fun. As for virtual concerts, that would mean singing live over prerecorded tracks. I’ve been asked to, as there are many singers in Second Life doing the same thing, but for now I’m too scared to “F up” :o) It will happen one day.


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