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THE LILAC MOON

Traun

RIO/Avant-Prog


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Traun The Lilac Moon album cover
4.00 | 3 ratings | 1 reviews | 0% 5 stars

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Studio Album, released in 2017

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. The Crystal Caverns (3:30)
2. Aervallis (1:50)
3. The Broken Barge (1:32)
4. Inn of the Dreaded Hippy (2:00)
5. The Thieving Wall (1:55)
6. Greywater Hideaway (1:21)
7. The Lilac Moon (1:06)
8. Errands of Captain Yargh (0:35)
9. The Old Road (2:00)
10. Valeriana (1:37)
11. Brig to Nowhere (2:32)
12. Embers in Snowfall (1:40)

Total Time 21:38


2023 re-ordered re-issue, incl. previously extracted tracks that were on the 4th album from 2017 called "Deleted Scenes" :

1. The Deserts of Traun (1:41)
2. Making Haste (1:13)
3. The Broken Barge (1:32)
4. Inn of the Dreaded Hippy (2:00)
5. The Old Road (2:01)
6. The Thieving Wall (1:54)
7. Greywater Hideaway (1:22)
8. Transient Sea (1:37)
9. Malcytol (0:43)
10. Pirate Stronghold (1:38)
11. Lost ArPgee (2:03)
12. Shuttle Amurensis (0:56)
13. The Lilac Moon (1:05)
14. Errands of Captain Yargh (0:37)
15. Valeriana (1:38)
16. Brig to Nowhere (2:33)
17. Embers in Snowfall (1:36)
18. OWP3 (2:14)

Total Time 28:23

Line-up / Musicians

On the original 2017 album release:
- Maria Grigoryeva / violin & viola sections
- Dave Murray / drums & percussion, metal vocals, flute, acoustic guitar
- Tim Smolens / upright bass
- Timb Harris / violin solo (12)
- Amir Yagmai / violin & violin solo (2)
- Lyudmila Kadyrbaeva / cello
- Jamison Smeltz / tenor & baritone saxophones
- Paul McKee / bass, guitar, mandolin
- Joe Willis / Fender Rhodes
- Ben Wendel / flute solo (6), saxophone solo (1), bassoon
- Adam Stacey / accordion
- Scott Nelson / guitar
- Hugo LaNauEstudi / acoustic guitar, bass

Releases information

Digital album (August 6, 2017)

Digital album (December 7, 2023) reissue with more tracks and new tracks listing

Thanks to dav19pt5 for the addition
and to projeKct for the last updates
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TRAUN The Lilac Moon ratings distribution


4.00
(3 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(0%)
0%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(100%)
100%
Good, but non-essential (0%)
0%
Collectors/fans only (0%)
0%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

TRAUN The Lilac Moon reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by siLLy puPPy
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
4 stars This Dave Murray is not the guitarist from Iron Maiden but a drummer who has been involved in a number of interesting musical acts including Estradasphere, Tholus and Sculptured however before he was getting all wild and crazy in the avant-garde rock and metal universe he started out with a grander vision of what would become a project under the name The Deserts of Träun which began all the way back in the 90s. It was designed to be a conceptual sci-fi journey through several albums about the world of TRAUN which according to the website TRAUN dot com:

"The world of Traun is in peril after a flying health spa arrives at the outer rim of their star system. At the helm, a despotic tycoon named Voss ignites a trade war with the neighboring planets to acquire the water he needs to fill his baths. The capitol of Traun? the Fruitless Kingdom?has launched an offensive against Spa 9, but they have not been able to evict the illicit resort, nor regain control of their water supply. At this rate, life on Traun may be on the brink of extinction. But there may be hope brewing from within the sinister relaxation empire. The daughter of Voss?the Black Metal Princess?has been devising an elaborate ruse that will hopefully save the world of Traun, restore balance, and rescue her father from his own destruction."

After working with Tholus, Murray decided to bring his fantasy universe to life in musical form and recorded a rather out of sync sequel as his debut release titled "Part III: The Lilac Moon" under the moniker The Deserts Of Traun but was never happy with the weak production and video-gamish outcome therefore decided to reboot the whole series which brings us up to the modern day where he simultaneously released four EPs in 2017. Three of them are part of the series and the fourth is the leftover bonus tracks. Since the project took more than 20 years to complete, this is quite the ambitious effort and the fact that each EP hovers around the 20 minute mark make them quite accessible and the painstaking process of recording the wealth of sounds and styles with modern day technology makes these EPs substantially better than the 2003 album. Because this is a reboot, much material from that album was recycled and incorporated into the new releases.

The four EPs are to be heard in this order:

THE LILAC MOON

The Black Metal Princess

Escape From Spa 9

Deleted Scenes (bonus tracks)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

EP #1 - THE LILAC MOON

Each track has a storyline about how it relates to the concept. This is detailed in great artistic form on the TRAUN dot com website. This album, much like the Estradasphere albums Murray played on, runs the gamut of dreamy psychedelic ambience, electronic wizardry and heavy metal to bursts of jazz, folk and classical plus lots of ethnic influences as well. Just within the first track "The Crystal Caverns" many of these genres are present. However while the first track is more on the aggressive side, the second in line "Aervallis" is more of an airy Celtic folk song with busy Disney-esque classical leanings that leap into heavy progressive rock and back to dreamy folk. It takes no time at all to realize this is a huge project with thirteen musicians delivering rock (guitar, drums, bass, keys), classical (violin, viola, bassoon, cello, upright bass), folk (accordion, acoustic guitar, flute, mandolin) and jazz (baritone and tenor sax).

"The Broken Barge" continues with a speakeasy jazz lounge feel while "Inn Of The Dreaded Hippy" is right out of the Mr Bungle playbook with crazy keyboard workouts and time signature rich prog jumping in and out of metal with every other crazy idea thrown in for good measure. "The Thieving Wall" only continues the eclectic output with crazy heavy prog rhythms angularly darting out all over the place at breakneck speed with a slight surf rock vibe. Sort of like Secret Chiefs 3 on steroids. "Greywater Hideaway" is sombre and piano rich as well as slow and sumptuous and short like all the track which all hover around the two minute mark with the exception of the opener which hits three. The title track is flute rich prog folk rock track with more Celtic feels while "Errands Of Captain Yargh" is an explosive death metal explosion with industrial overtones.

"The Old Road" is back to prog folk only in a love affair downtempo electronica. "Valeriana" begins with mandolin and sounds like Renaissance music but quickly incorporates heavy rock guitar stomping and then morphs into classical soundtrack music. Damn, it's hard to keep up with this ever-changing sonic feast! "Brig To Nowhere" begins with a pulsating electronic noise with a guitar playing in mono in the background but it becomes extreme metal guitar chugging with steady riffing but morphs into more progressive technicalities. Occasional breaks reveal a symphonic backdrop. "Embers In Snowfall" is a slow ambient folk outro. This album is only 21 minutes plus of music but has a ridiculous amount of elements and complexity in its playing time. Very cool stuff obviously catering to the Mr Bungle, Secret Chiefs 3, Estradasphere and Atomic Ape crowds.

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