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Apsalar View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 03:54
If you are looking for the original vinyl of Dun - Eros you could be having a bit of trouble. But if the reissue CD verision is your thing, it is quite easy to find. This is a list from the label of places where it is avalible
 
 
Alternatively we can give Ultima Thule a bit of interest:
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 03:58

      Thanx Faaip..! Had to pay through the nose for Eros. Was on a drip for a week


Hope you know the meaning of Gerogerigegege,,,!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 03:59
Originally posted by Yukorin Yukorin wrote:


The two Vortex releases.

My vinyl copies are showin' signs of age so I wanna buy the recently issued double cd. Can't remember which label reissued her. BV, can you help ? Incidentally the one on the left ('Vortex' 1975) is the rarest record I own. Pity it's in such a bad state.
 
Yukorin, you should be able to purchase this nice little reissue on Waysidemusic for $30US, but I am sure there are other vendors do offers.
 
 
Here is a little about the band for those unfarmiliar
 
"
This is a rather important and also rather unexpected reissue! Vortex are an under-known and underappreciated band who combined jazz rock with zeuhl and avant-progressive tendencies and recorded two rather rare albums in their lifetime (Vortex and Les Cycles De Thanatos). The first album featured Fender piano, saxes, flute, bass and drums, while the second album eliminated the flute, added more reeds, as well as oboe, English horn, mallet percussion and more! This CD includes both albums plus over 25' of bonus material which has never before been released, as well as a history of the band in French & English, as well as many photos. "Les Cycles de Thanatos is a dark-sounding album integrating rock, jazz, and neo-classical elements. Probably the most dominant feature on the album is the dark brooding neo-classical rock, sounding not unlike Univers Zero or Art Zoyd. In addition, there are Zeuhl-ish jazz rock passages that remind me of Zao, Moving Gelatine Plates, instrumental Zappa, and Potemkine. An excellent album of typical French avant-garde/underground music."-Sjef Oellers/Gnosis [Le Triton]"
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 04:03

Thanx BV..!

                      Certainly was an unexpected reissue ! I bought their first thinking it was Cyclones du Thanatos and after doing a bit of research found that nobody even knew there was a 'First' album release ! God knows where they found it ! I wonder if the cd is from the master tapes or straight from vinyl ? I believe this cd is quite scarse now as well
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 04:19

I think that vinyl is something you are going to have to keep an eye on over the years

I can only muse they have found the original tapes taking into account of the extra bonus material. But I'm not sure of this, I don't even want to imagine the effort taken to find them.
 
Since we are on the V's of Zeuhl how about the Zeuhlish Verto - Krig Volubilis? This is definately one which has not been reissued, but dearly should be.
 
Here is a review from or friend Cope
 
Reading Achuma's excellent set of reviews recently on the dark French-atronica of the mid-seventies Pole collective etc.. I was put in mind of this murderously dark Gallic masterpiece. The work mainly of Jean-Pierre Grasset and various Goubin brothers (who made up the late-Zeuhl band Potemkine) Krig / Volubilis from 1976 is a sort of merger between the abstract electronica of Besombes et al. and a more Crimson-ised Zeuhl. Especially so for the first side of this LP. "Krig" kicks off proceedings with an ominously drawn out Magmoid riff, distorted fretless bass death rattles crying out from the off. "En Terre" retains the dark aura (in fact the dark aura never disperses), sounding like one of the darker Fripp/Eno collaborations maybe, ultra-sustained guitar buzzing like a demonically possessed wasp over vacant, ethereal voices panting out a typically magma three-note ululation. Never slowing the guitar is constantly on the move, never allowing the listener to settle into anything resmbling emotional stability until it cuts off into a satanic laugh. A 45-second interlude "Ether" follows, here doing exactly what is says on the tin, a floaty etherised wobble of guitar notes and into the 5-minute free-folk of "Oka," a disjointed early Amon Dull thing with strange vocal chanting along the melody. For some reason it reminds me of Pye Hastings, don't ask why!?! Verto are back on track for the seven minute "Locomo" - a false bouncy Weather Report-type riff lulling the listener into a false sense of security until the most-fuzzed out guitar solo scrawls musical graffiti all over it (metaphorically speaking).

But as most people famiiar with this LP will be anticipating with this review, the magnum opus is on Side Two - the 18 minute "Strato" - one of the most whacked-out pieces of mid-seventies space-rock to emerge from Europe. French electronica amd space-rock has always seemed to me to be a little more phased and plangent-sounding than its German counterpart. And the overall experience of this piece is akin to being enveloped in some kind of spectral, ectoplasmic, space-goo, as it seemingly undulates slowly and mysteriously from the speakers. Believe me, "Strato" is in no hurry to get finished, it emerges deathly slow out of nowhere, the most sublime guitar strokes gently brushing, tentative and meditative. Similarities might be early Ash Ra Tempel or the more-impressive versions of Jimi Page's violin-solo expeditions into the cosmos on "Dazed."
Even more obvious is the Pompei-era Gilmour-like, sit-down and mess with your guitar noises that Grasset exhumes from the most-buried essences of his instrument. Its easily up there with anything the Germans put out, as far as space-rock is concerned. (Side Note: even the French "Prog" bands were more spacey than most: Pulsar, Wlud, etc)
then everything gets echoed out and we seem to be in a Affenstude-era Popol Vuh space-valley for a while. "Strato" really is a journey in every sense of the word. By its end you will never have guessed 18 minutes have passed. Mid-way a doomed riff begins to form, and some shape emerges out of the mist, a chromium guitar sound crys out , very Hillage-toned until yet another resounding space riff begins to chug away along the home straight, at once recalling the styles of both Gottsching and Achim Reichel's mighty ur-text ECHO (1972). Is there no end to this piece? Of course, there is, and its a a blissfully-stoned glacial guitar-outro, but it isn't the end of the LP. The darkest and most abstract has been saved to the last. A 5-minute er..."potentiometer-out" has yet to take place. The track, called "TK 240 S 52" is early-Cluster-like, huge meta-shapes of abstract synthesiser collide and merge, a fitting (albeit pessimistic) end to this musical experience.
VERTO really is an obscure masterpiece of guitar-driven, electronica and avant space-rock - its seems like an amalgamation of all the various tropes of the seventies French rock scene.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 04:31

I have the Verto LP. Unfortunately me turntables broke...


                                                                 
                                                       
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 04:42

I really enjoy ol' Copeys enthusiasm and writing style. Here are a couple of my favourite reviews by him (and both in keeping with this thread)

Julian Cope's Album of the Month
Magma - Köntarkösz
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SEPTEMBER 2001ce

Magma
Köntarkösz

Released 1974 on A&M
Reviewed by Julian Cope
"How impossible it is to deny the personal influence of individual great men on the history of the world."

SIGMUND FREUD, Moses & Monotheism.

A Kelt in a Krautrock-style

On July 6th 1978, I found a copy of Magma’s then four-year-old LP Köntarkösz in a junky second-hand shop on the corner of Belmont Road, Liverpool. My friends Paul Simpson and Smelly Elly green-eyed it greedily as I paid over the £1.30, whilst the singer in our ‘band’, a prude called Ian McCulloch, legged out of the shop as quick as you like, saying he’d always suspected I was a ‘f**king jazz rock fan!"

But I myself had had a difficult relationship with Magma since 1972, way back when my Mahavishnu Orchestra-loving mate Herb Leake had bought their insane black gatefold-sleeved debut double-LP and tried to convince me that it wasn’t just Blood Sweat & Tears on an astral plane. Sure it was, I’d argued relentlessly. The singer’s David Clayton-Thomas and they’re on bloody Philips. How un-rock can ya get?

But I secretly held Herb Leake in high esteem for forking out such big dosh for a such a big Euro-double. And though he often admitted to me that the record wasn’t nearly as far out as Faust or Amon Duul 2, we both got a big kick out of this strange super-gloss gatefold packaging with its ultra-annoying/intriguing end-flaps, which you wanted to cut off because they so easily ripped, yet couldn’t because they held inordinate amounts of information.

And however much I called them Blood, Sweat & Tears, in the early ‘70s only Magma would have dared appear (all eight of them) in fitted black flared one-piece jumpsuits and matching occult medallions; three of them saluting the sun, whilst the other five just stared you out, as though thinking: "Yeah? Whatchyew gonna do about it?"

Yup, even back then Magma weren’t no ordinary brassy jazz-based octet. Whereas the impressionism of Faust and the German bands intrigued you with the sheer lack of information, Magma assaulted you with wave upon wave of MEANING. And what meaning! Whilst the bottom right-hand corner of their album waylaid ya with the mysterious words "Univeria Zekt", the names of the tracks were something-else-again (as we 15-year-old proto-heads loved to say). "Nau Ektila", "Stoah", "Muh" and "Thaud Zaia" were hardly French, though not German either. And how did you even attempt to pronounce "Schxyss"? Hey, I’m gonna be hanging with these guys when I grow big enough balls.

As all the copious sleevenotes were in French, it took all our powers of decoding to discover that the mysterious Attaturko-Rumanian grunting of the Clayton-Thomasian lead singer was actually in an invented language called Kobaian, which had been especially made up for Magma by their unbelievably talented and mysterious drummer Christian Vander. sh*t, it was all run by the bloody drummer! We all ran around using words like ‘pretentious’ for a coupla months. Well, not words LIKE ‘pretentious’ - we actually just said ‘pretentious’ and let that do us. It was a time when ‘pretentious’ could even be used positively - a bit like ‘paranoid’, a word which I’m absolutely sure Black Sabbath themselves never really understood. Every stupid get in the school was ‘paranoid’ at some point, just as every no-mark doing metalwork or technical drawing yearned to be a temporary poet in order to be called ‘pretentious’.


Theusz Hamtaahk

But, in my Tamworthian neck-of-the-woods, nothing more was heard of Magma for a year or so. Apparently, they had released another LP called 1001 Degrees Centigrade, but no-one got beyond ogling its imported single sleeve in Birmingham Virgin Records, except Herb Leake’s reggae mate Puddle, who claimed that it sounded a lot like the first one, as though he’d have a clue. Anyway, what with the single sleeve, it was hardly worth the bother, or so we all comforted ourselves.

But then something truly insane happened. In February 1973, Magma signed to A&M Records and released an album of true genius. A classic. A record so weird and catchy-at-the-same-time that you could sing it straight-faced and piss off all the soul boys at school to such an extent that they wanted to disarticulate you right there and then. And it was on A&M - the f**king Carpenters label run by Herb Alpert the trumpeter! It’s 1973 and the world has gone insane. f**king hell, it was weird enough seeing the late copies of Faust’s first LP, no longer the clear vinyl copies which had howled ‘statement’, but black vinyl ones with a standard red Polydor label. Train spotter-y great-coated 15-year-olds such as we were needed solid cultural contexts by which to live. There were traditions to uphold. Slade was red label Polydor not Faust! And A&M was certainly never gonna be Magma.

Except that it very definitely was. Magma’s new album appeared in such a high grade black and gold gatefold that we all felt empowered by this strangely magical act. Magma seemed to have made it, and the record was a new totem to keep on the outside of your weighty underarm LP collection to be conspicuously paraded as you struggled great-coated and unshaven around Tamworth every Saturday afternoon.

And what was the name of this mighty new release? I’ll tell ya, kiddies. It was Mekanik Destruktiw Kommandoh. Catchy huh? And what was it about? Well, y’know - mechanical destructive commandos and everything that they do. Bloody obvious I woulda thought.

And it turned out that this third album - Mekanik Destruktiw Kommandoh - was actually part 3 of an unfolding 9LP series known as Theusz Hamtaahk. In Christian Vander’s utopian mind, rock’n’roll was now at a cultural place in the collective mind of humanity where it could possibly be used to help us take giant leaps forward via a few forward-thinking motherf**kers such as he - people with a true tale to tell.

And so Theusz Hamtaahk was Vander’s vehicle for healing the world. Those first two releases, in which the singer Klaus Blasquiz had appeared to be gargling endless portentous phlegm, now made some kind of sense. Those two albums, Magma and 1001 Degrees Centigrade, had been telling the tale of future humans leaving polluted Mother Earth, travelling to their new home on planet Kobaia, returning as evangelists to the Earth, then being imprisoned as dangerous neo-aliens, before being released by Earth’s authorities, who had been informed by Kobaian command that Earth would be disintegrated should they refuse. Cool.

So why was Mekanik Destruktiw Kommandoh such unfettered genius?

The real reason that Mekanik Destruktiw Komandoh was so good was that it appeared utterly complete and fully-formed to most people. It had the backing of a big record company and, like Athena bursting from the head of Zeus, it had no apparent provenance. If you listened to just Mekanik Destrukiw Kommandoh, it had no influences to grab hold of, no background of any kind, just a bunch of humanoids with thee weirdest names who all hung out together, and spoke their own language. A bit like Dexy’s during their Buddhist Boxers Phase.

Three fundamental changes in Magma’s line-up had sent their sound into hyperspace. First-of-all, their new producer was Gorgio Gomelsky; the swinging London impresario who had been former manager of the Yardbirds and producer of the very psychedelic early Soft Machine. Secondly, gone was the first bass player and gone with him was the jazz - replaced by the scariest and greatest shaved-bald middle-European Ur-Human of all-time. And with the greatest name-of-all-time, too: Jannik Top.

Jannik Top! I’m shaking in me booties just thinking ‘bout him. Jannik Top was a Gene Simmons for people with their own IQ. He played the bass like a Tyrannosaurus Rex skinning a Stegosaurus. He was at least eight feet tall and had claws instead of hands. His bass sound made the night fall early, and kept the moon from rising at all. He didn’t have amplifiers, he just plugged straight into the National Grid and drained the neighbourhood. Upon the ogre-ish arrival of Jannik Top, the early brass section of two saxes and trumpet had left bloodied, sweating and teary - exit three cool-schoolers pursued by a bear.

The other change was the arrival of five Valkyries - a spectacular and oracular choir of women with wonder-fuel Teutono-Frankish names: Muriel Streisfeld, Evelyne Razymovski, Michele Saulnier, Doris Reinhardt and, last but not least, her Just-as-Highness Stella Vander, in her role as (to give her full Kobaian appellation) Organik Kommandeuhr. The first two records had featured poor Klaus Blasquiz on his lonesome vocal jacksee howling up a lupine storm like the Alaskan shaman Igjugurjuk with the white authorities hot on his trail - a Michael Ryan figure picking off innocent Hungerford bystanders and garnering zero compassion from the listener. BUT, the magical effect of having five Tungerman Death Goddesses singing along with him suddenly made Klaus into a combination of Superman, Spiderman, Ultraman AND all 16 of his brothers simultaneously!!!

Whereas, on the first two LPs, lonely Klaus was often an irksome intrusion (often mixed down lower than the brass), on Mekanik Destruktiw Kommandoh, the whole vocal system became a visionary call-and-answer Divine Dialogue of epic proportions. Imagine this piece of libretto screamed out in Kobaian and tell me it’s not genius:

"I have seen the Angel of Light and he smiled at me. He smiled at me, he smiled at me, the Angel of Light."

And the others surprised, question him:
"The Angel of Light smiled at you?"

And he answers with growing conviction:
"He smiled at me, the Angel of Light."

And the others again ask him:
"He smiled at you, the Angel of Light?"

And he answers:
"He smiled at me, he smiled at me."

And so it goes on."

If teenage mates of mine came to Mekanik Destruktiw Kommandoh cold and loved it, I never blew it for them by telling them that the band had made two jazz-based semi-achievements beforehand. I could even have shown them the first two expensive imports in Virgin and they’d never have guessed - without hearing the music the sleeves looked great and, in the early ‘70s, imports were a no-no to listen to on Virgin headphones unless you were a real grown-up with plenny o’dough. And so the mystery continued…1

Köntarkösz

By June 1974, Magma had changed all over again and the low-key opera known as Köntarkösz was released. Emotionally, it’s probably best described as Amon Duul 2’s Renate Knaup and Lothar Meid meets the reformed Van Der Graaf Generator on an unvisitable and otherworldly plateau.

"Köntarkösz Part One" opens with furious beat-the-kit-into-submission and telegraph wire bass lines over droning hanging one-chord organ, before Klaus Blasquiz leads the ensemble into a punctuated angular descending riff, kinda like the Doors "America". This mutates into a slow slow portentous Do-Re-Mi of pianos and mob-handed bass, as waspish fuzz organ irritates the choir, buzzing around their collective asses, getting permanently shooed elsewhere. Klaus hisses and cajoles the music, as though he’s trying to cop off with the many heads of Medusa simultaneously, but he’s fighting a losing battle and he’s in danger of them all sussing his two-facedness any minute. Bass oozes from every aural orifice, as the fuzz organ becomes untethered and pushes forwards overly-loud and brazen. Star Trekian females ooh and aah soothingly, but we’re in that same netherland which Van Der Graaf Generator found themselves throughout Godbluff, and no-one feels soothed at all. According to the sleevenotes, we’re now entering the tomb of Emehnteht-Re and only the rhythm section and bass piano dare play, until… aaaaah! Horrible horrible zapping synthesized loud organ ker-monsters your senses out of the right-hand speaker, picked up by the female voices and rhythm which continues to rise and fight the fuzz organ. This then subsides and lets the ensemble continue their way into the ancient tomb. Gentle oriental pianos cascade over brooding distorted Yamaha organ, until the whole track slowly fades.

Then we’re off into the storm of "Ork Alarm", Jannik Top’s ever-ascending cello-driven Blasquiz-ian proto-human mantra. Stereo clavinets echo across the speakers as pumping, driving cellos and waspish Yoko-Ono-like female vocals shiver and shake, inspiring a strangled lead guitar to wring out a hoodoo of notes. No drums. No drums at all. A Christian Vander album and there’s no drums! So rhythmic, so charged… and all without drums! Until the final moments,that is, when the intense paranoia has become just too much and the super stereo FX of crunching Iron Man electro-footsteps come raging up some Milky Way pathway of gravel stars and bring the whole claustrophobic thang to a conclusion of sweet relief.

In total contrast, "Köntarkösz Part Two" is a huge and epic mantra, a heathen movie score for an unfilmed religious epic. It’s the closest Magma ever get to approaching that unchanging Krautrock-ian spiralling that Can and Popol Vuh loved so much, building slowly and gently around just three notes, getting progressively louder and louder and more and more furious, until the whole track finishes with the low rasping tongues of Buddist Monk-type chanting.

Kontakosz concludes with the delicate beauty of "Coltrane Sundia", a short eulogy to the dead John Coltrane. This multiple piano and guitar piece would be at home on Popol Vuh’s Einjager und Seibenjager, hanging in a kind of suspended animation as rippling waterfalls of piano notes tumble out over a gorge of rumbling bass notes. Perhaps these are the last notes of the perfect Magma ensemble, or perhaps I’m being a romantic and claiming something which could never have been quite so simple.

It may be that Jannik Top just tried to take over. It may be that Christian Vander decided that Theusz Hamtaahk was no longer achievable. It may be that A&M came to their senses and heard Joan Armatrading. But, whatever it was, Köntarkösz and Mekanik Destruktiw Kommandoh were destined to remain the only A&M releases ever made by Magma. The detective work is all there waiting to be done by some journalist with a good ear for an occult tale. If you’ve read my book Repossessed, then you’ll know the weirdness of Christian Vander’s Spanish castle magic battle with big Jannik, and how my/their tour manager Martin Cole was reduced to driving from one hilltop to another in an attempt to make both of them see some sense.

Beyond the Valley of Jannik Top

The albums after Köntarkösz do have some insanely great moments, but as time moves on they get increasingly few and far between. Two particular albums, though, must be appraised for their hidden genius. On 1976’s extremely patchy Udu Wudu, Christian Vander even attempted to trump the death of his mighty ensemble by letting Jannik Top entirely lose on the berserker magic of the side-long epic "De Futura". But a Magma in which Jannik held sway was a Magma in which Klaus Blasquiz was returned to his Igjugurjuk/Michael Ryan role. And I do believe even he himself recognised this, the vocal credit on Udu Wudu’s "Zombies" merely reading "Klaus Blasquiz - growl". For me, Udu Wudu fails not because Magma has become a kind of augmented power trio - that’s fine, and Blasquiz, Top and Vander makes an almighty machine - but because it’s really a return to jazz rock. Clothe it any Teutonic or Utopian way you wish and I still can’t stand the stuff.

Far better was the more ensemble-based Attahk, which saw Jannik Top totally ousted. Yet the opening track and long main themes again generally suffered from the same bugger-digger jazz bass lines and brittle percussive onslaught that I can’t abide. However, the real ‘songs’ - the piano-based "Spiritual", "Rinde", "Nono" and "Dondai" - inhabited a kind of magical and impossibly beautiful Afro-Teutonic space that makes you desperate for an entire album with this sense of loss. Imagine Norman Whitfield at his Undisputed Truth-period experimental best putting out a German-only release on R.U. Kaiser’s Pilz label, and you glimpse the moments that these later Magma tracks still generated. Or maybe Tim Buckley’s "Get on Top"/"Sweet Surrender" vocal gyrations over one of the longer tracks from the Cosmic Couriers’ Tarot. On "Nono", Klaus Blasquiz gets more tearful than Clarence Carter’ on his soul-weepy "Patches". On "Dondai", reunited at last with his New Soul Valkyries, Klaus becomes the greatest and most abandoned operatic soul diva of all time - Sylvester meets Klaus Nomi meets Alan Vega meets Don’t Stand Me Down-period Kevin Rowlands on a railway platform waving goodbye to all hope, all possibilities, all family, all relationships - a squirming, writhing apostate soul brother stomping at the Pillar of Irminsul, desperately willing the newly-converted King Charlemagne to "Spare that tree!"2

But music of this yearning and intensity never came about from a good sensible strategy meeting - it was clearly born in the euphoric high heavens of the central European plain and dragged its migratory self by the knuckles sacrificing itself to itself at every monolith and significant tree, in the true shamanic tradition. The closest that Christian Vander and Jannik Top ever got to a compromise was in not killing each other.

But, then, probably the ultimate reason I hate the Romans so much is because of their pragmatism - as every Roman animal sacrifice doubled as a barbecue, was it even a sacrifice at all? Surely it meant no more than Bill Nelson’s guitar sacrifices during his Bebop Deluxe days, in which he would play a Gibson all evening then substitute that Gibson for a cheap Hondo copy, before ceremoniously setting it afire. Like the Romans before him, Bill made it look great but it didn’t have to hurt his pocket. Was it, then, really any more of a sacrifice than the wishing well is nowadays - in which we throw in 10 pence to make a wish whilst patting the tenner lodged firmly in our back pocket?

Probably not. But for Christian Vander and Jannik Top this was a true soul sacrifice. And when Jannik Top awoke one Spanish morning to discover that his former partner/boss had caused him to rip open his own chest during the night, whatever despair he then lived through must have eventually been overtaken (perhaps much much later) by the realisation that, together in temporary unity, a bass player and a drummer had not only glimpsed that Kobaian Utopia which they had projected into the heavens - but, like Igjugurjuk himself, they had sustained long enough to visit that imagined planet and its Utopian culture and bring us all back a piece.

Buy and listen to Köntarkösz and Mekanik Destruktiw Kommandoh, then go to an oldies record shop and check out the sleeves of the other LPs. You don’t need ALL these records, but you sure as hell gotta grab the two classics. Then the genius of Christian Vander will slowly become subsumed into your consciousness, and you’ll want to own the others just because of what he symbolises. And then, little by little, bit by bit…



FOOTNOTES:
  1. If you need to hear some of Mekanik Destruktiw Kommandoh, check out W.S.Y.M.’s Thighpaulsandra programmes. One of them features the album’s opening track, "Hortz Fur Dehn Stekehn West".
  2. Like all visionaries and genuinely forward-thinking motherf**kers, as time moved on, Christian Vander remained as true to the trail as ever. Speaking to Ed Vulliamy in the London Evening Standard; 16th January 1988, Vander was still claiming that Magma’s music was there to be used to confront strong and violent emotions and to dissolve them through "a new consciousness in which we no longer have to take time to land from our moments of aggression, and we understand exactly the place where we are and what things are around us. We are telling always the same story, of the same douleur [pain/distress] and the same souffrance [suffering] in order to achieve the same goal."

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 04:44
Julian Cope's Album of the Month
The Boredoms - Vision Creation New Sun
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NOVEMBER 2001ce

The Boredoms
Vision Creation New Sun

Released 2000 on Birdman
Reviewed by Julian Cope
First time I heard this album was like a deluge overload euphoria had descended from the highest heavens and whipped me screaming, whirling, teenaged and drooling into my first acid trip/first hard on/first astral projection into a region of unfathomable and untameable NEWNESS. Didn’t even know what the singer was singing. Had the record and didn’t even know what it was called. Heard all seven songs and thought they were all one piece (still don’t know the individual titles). I felt like the mystery of all music had been boiled up over one Hindu kalpa (8,640,000,000 years of human reckoning) and had then been distilled through this Boredoms album. I fell asleep listening to the album and woke up several times during it, only to fall asleep again overwhelmed and tearful and with a butterfly belly of surging gnawing passion.
In the middle of the night, my toy doubleneck (which I used for all the TOO difficult parts of the LAMF album) fell over on its face next to my bed. I shot up in bed, looked down at this riffing orange toy playing familiar music alone and unprompted. I jumped outta bed and grabbed the thing and took it (still riffing) to the farthest corner of my bathroom and closed the door.
Lay there. Motionless.
Couldn’t sleep.
Needed to create a new sound.
Needed... to create a... new sound.
Is that what the singer was singing?
Was that the Boredoms’ lyric?
New sound?
Sound sound sound.

Shamanic 4 a.m.
I put the record on headphones loud as hell.
No way could it possibly sustain that sheerly mystical feeling of that first coupla listens. No way at all.
IT f**kING DID!
Single voice starts the record.
"New Sun!"
Then, we’re off into thee single greatest rush of music since the last Millennium.
This time I listened again and again without falling asleep, until the sun came up and the birds were dawning their chorus thang, and I was a reborn earthling.

So what does it sound like? I dunno - maybe like the Faust Tapes’ most euphoric uplifting moments were digitally tape-sped into some kind of Beyond Time.

You know how you occasionally read a review of some new Fall LP and they say the Fall are back on form and you just gotta hear this particular record and you get all excited and hopping cause if the Fall just got genuinely back on it (even briefly) U-Know it would be a pagan free-for-all to live for. And it has intriguing song titles like "Dame J. Burchill Art Gulag" and a supposedly great cover version of Don Covay’s "It’s Better to Have & Don’t Need (Than Need & Don’t Have)". And in that brief time between reading about the album and hearing the album, you’re a kid again with a kid’s dreams and a whole world of possibilities (not just musical) is thrown up in front of you. Then you hear that new Fall record and it’s just more embittered semi-mystical coded fraudulent ramblings about NOTHING nothing NOTHING.

BUT......... it does not matter because you’ve still enjoyed AND lived fully through those moments of possibilities.

Well this album is all those possibilities AND it achieves. Those of you who always wanna dig my Album of the Month but then get disappointed because its way too weird and not weird enough and too rock but not rock enough and too obscure but not obscure enough - well, this is the album for you! You are all gonna get down on your knees and crawl to my front door after this one. Crawl crawl crawl.

How do I know? Because I’ve listened to this album so many times and just kept coming back and coming back and it never fails me. Played this f**king record so much on the last tour that I had to consciously NOT put it on before every set, or risk appearing like some teenybopper asshole with one CD in the collection. This is truly enlightened music which encompasses the Lofty-est rock’n’roll moments of every entirely necessary group of all time without sounding like any of them.
Imagine those heights of ludicrously optimistic utopianism achieved occasionally by the Mellotron’d Hawkwind of side one of Warrior on the Edge of Time, the pre-Velvets menstrual-cycling of the Jaynettes’ "Sally Go Round the Roses", the eternally rainy-day monostare of "Hiroshima" from The Flower Travellin’ Band’s classic LP Made in Japan, the strangely Chuck Berry-based hard cissy weeping vision of Justin Hayward’s "The Story in your Eyes" by the Moody Blues, the 11-minute guitar destruction of "Love Is More than Words or Better Late Than Never" by the late-period heavy version of Love, led by Arthur ‘I’m-one-of-the-greatest-lyric-writers-of-all-time-but-right-now-I’m-gonna-shut-the-f**k-up’ Lee, the cartoon-y but nonetheless real sense of loss on The Residents’ "Ship’s a-going Down" from Not Available, the one-off death trip despair of Slapp Happy’s genius one-off 45 "Johnny’s Dead", the unlikely overloaded-Spanish-Galleon-over-arranged enlightenment of Sabbath’s "Spiral Architect", the someone-help-me-help-me-help-me-please Puppy Love-Effect at the gasping-for-air tailend of the Tubes’ "White Punks on Dope", the breathtakingly ever-upwards powersurge that is "You’re in America", the opening track from the first Granicus LP. Imagine all these things, and then imagine them compressed and digitally enhanced and sampled and used purely to empower you. Pow. Pow. Used in order to bring an emotional Pow-Wow, equivalent to applying a psychic garlic poultice to your poor fuzzbitten inner streetplan.

Who are these Boredoms? Well they been around for two decades and they’re led by a figure called Eye. Eye? Aye. And, clearly, there’s only the one Eye. And they’ve been a punk band, and they’ve been an all percussion chanting shamanic ensemble, and they’ve had 20 years to prepare us for this. And are we prepared. No No No. How do you describe true psychedelia? Do I write:
"There’s one beautiful period on track 4 when the whole group becomes Hawkwind on "Silver Machine" rising upwards in a space boogie which digitally transforms itself into that percussion and guitar freakout from the middle of Chicago’s "I’m A Man" 45 (by the way, if you haven’t heard that cover version of Spencer Davis’ finest moment, get it now now now - it is still a transcendental earth-moving moment from a group that is otherwise utterly unworthy of consideration)."

Do I write that? No. There’s a whole vibrational otherness coursing through this record which, if I’m stretched to compare, again reminds me of the Faust Tapes. But really it’s just the sound of fine fine music made by people who live at a higher level than every other f**ker. Sure those other reference points I’ve thrown in are there to ground the review in whatever the real world is. But Vision Creation New Sun is a masterpiece. And I mean that in the old sense. It’s a masterpiece insofar as it creates a new genre. A new die has been cast. It’s a sustainable sonic orgasm where before there was no sustainable sonic orgasm. Other musicians can now rip this masterpiece off (I surely f**king will) and humanity will be higher because of it. Nothing less.

Album of November? Album of the Year!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 04:45

Both of the above reviews taken from Julian Cope's website:


           http://www.headheritage.co.uk/
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 04:52
Yeah, These old records will turn you to a poor man real quick.  If i wasn't already poor, and had a Turntable. I'd venture into the wonderful world of Vinyl.

Atleast i have a great stereo!!


! ... Yeah i know what it mean's. Haha, Leave it to good ol' Juntaro to come up with a name like that !



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 05:08

Faaip,

What did you think of '4 Visions' ?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 05:25

Been listening to Italys Runaway Totem's 'Andromeda' recently. Not too bad but I feel it is let down by over-production and Musea's usual shoddy artwork
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 17:08
Oh, 4 Visions!! I listened to it 2 times in a row last night as i was going to sleep. And i enjoyed it immensly! Very Beautiful music!

Definatly a great Album

Thumbs Up

Hey, Yukorin. Have you heard anything by 'Happy Family'?






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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 17:15
Originally posted by Faaip_De_Oiad Faaip_De_Oiad wrote:

Oh, 4 Visions!! I listened to it 2 times in a row last night as i was going to sleep. And i enjoyed it immensly! Very Beautiful music!

Definatly a great Album

Thumbs Up

Hey, Yukorin. Have you heard anything by 'Happy Family'?



 
I realise that was addressed to Yukorin, but I've been reacquainted with 4 Visions recently and it's a dashed spiffing album indeed!
 
I've got Toscco by Happy Family, pretty good but a bit anonymous I thought - great chops but not a lot of character. But I'm a grumpy old git, make your own mind up.
'Like so many of you
I've got my doubts about how much to contribute
to the already rich among us...'

Robert Wyatt, Gloria Gloom


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 18:12
Haha, Yeah. Happy Family can be a bit cold. But i love their somewhat harsh style. As opposed to the usual warm smooth Zeuhl sound. I love it!


Oh!! I got Udu Wudu!!


Wow, i think i've found a new favorite Magma album. and the album closer De futura is one of magma's best! Truly Stellar album



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 11 2006 at 19:14
I just wanted to share my opinions on Eskaton's 4 visions and I enjoyed it alot! It's so groovy. I love the bass and the overall high energy of the album. I think I'll review them some time soon.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2006 at 09:54

        Hard not to love Eskaton ! An' yes ! So groovy. DiscoZeuhl perhaps...?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2006 at 09:59

   Heard a rumour last year that Happy Family may be reforming. Think their 1st is a stone classic. The tension created on the 19 minute 'Naked King'  makes my extremities shrink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2006 at 15:50
! Happy Family Reforming ! I hope the rumors are true. although it seems it's been awhile sense you last heard the rumor? And still no new info on this yet... ?

Neato! Your so right about Naked King.

I've always thaught that's an epic that will never get any recognition for the rest of eternity. Guh



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 13 2006 at 06:36

That first Happy Family release is so heavy I feel like a close friend has suddenly died everytime I give it a spin. An' the production kicks some serious arse !
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