| | Mars Volta Amputechture CD Mars Volta Discography of CDs
(15 Customer Reviews)
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The Mars Volta: Omar Rodriguez-Lopez, Paul Hinojos, Cedric Bixler-Zavala. Personnel: Sara Christina Gross (saxophone). Additional personnel: John Frusciante (guitar). Audio Mixer: Rich Costey. Recording information: El Paso, TX; Los Angeles, CA; Melbourne, Australia. Director: Omar Rodriguez-Lopez. Arranger: Omar Rodriguez-Lopez. On its third full-length album, the Mars Volta abandoned the enigmatic conceptual themes of its acclaimed earlier outings, DE-LOUSED IN THE COMATORIUM and FRANCES THE MUTE, but left its fascinatingly bizarre aesthetic intact. The result is a more immediate, though certainly not more conventional, approach, as vocalist Cedric Bixler Zavala and guitarist Omar A. Rodriguez-Lopez once again take listeners on a tour of surreal rock territory where the sounds of King Crimson, Santana, and Led Zeppelin are welded together into frenetic post-punk-influenced aural sculptures. Featuring significant contributions by multi-instrumentalist Pablo Hinojos-Gonzalez and frequent guest guitarist John Frusciante of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, AMPUTECHTURE is slightly less daunting than Volta's previous discs (see the stomping, horn-laden "Viscera Eyes"), but no less inventive. The Mars Volta are continual contenders for the mantle of most experimental high-profile metal group, along with System of a Down, an artist they've toured with but who usually sell 20 times more records. Mars Volta aren't as popular, not because their riffs are less memorable or innovative but because their cycle of musical buildup and release, although similarly jarring, can last at least 20 minutes instead of System's two. (It's the difference between having a background in acid rock and having one in thrash.) While the early reports on third album Amputechture commented that the duo of Cedric Bixler-Zavala and Omar Rodriguez-Lopez had learned a few lessons about silence and forsaken the concept album, don't believe it. The album is little different than their two previous atom bombs, De-Loused in the Comatorium and Frances the Mute -- tense and anxious, continually pushing the boundaries of extreme production, with long periods of dynamics that rise ever higher, followed by an explosion of release (usually screaming hard rock with storms of atonal brass and horns). The album opens with "Vicarious Atonement," five minutes of spectral effects and piercing guitar that gets a boost at the beginning of the next track, "Tetragrammaton," and then blooms into full riffing glory after a few more minutes (and they're still nowhere near the end of the 16-minute track). John Frusciante, eccentric genius from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, returns on guitar, but Bixler-Zavala and Rodriguez-Lopez exert so much control over the sound of Mars Volta that Frusciante makes virtually no individual impression on this record, although most of the guitar work is his. (Granted, his presence leaves Rodriguez-Lopez open for more intricate work on production.) The Mars Volta are one of the most intriguing bands in rock, but their huge musical power is often deflected by Bixler-Zavala's conceptual themes (which are difficult to follow, but also, perversely, impossible to ignore) and blitzkrieg dynamics that are either dialed down to one or up to ten (but rarely in-between). ~ John BushRolling Stone (p.88) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "Three songs here exceed ten minutes and are crammed with quantum-physics-level time signatures, battle-to-the-death jousts between guitar and horns and Bixler-Zavala's hummingbird keening." Spin (p.104) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[Omar Rodriguez-Lopez] scales back, relatively speaking, and rediscovers the crucial difference between prog nirvana and prog indulgence." Entertainment Weekly (p.77) - "AMPUTECHTURE again revels in overkill: fever-pitched vocals, orchestral fanfares, Latin percussion solos, even an acoustic Spanish interlude." -- Grade: B Uncut (p.89) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "Another 76-minute suite of apocrypha, endlessly contorting melodies, psychedelic curlicues...and general hysteria..." Vibe (p.156) - "[T]hey deeply, rapturously feel every long-winded, loony lick." Kerrang (Magazine) (p.66) - Ranked #19 in Kerrang's "20 Greatest Albums of 2006" -- "[L]eft-field esoterica and constantly mutating space rock jams." Mars Volta Amputechture Songs Amputechture Music Review Purchase Amputechture CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Mars Volta Tremulant EP CD (2002)
Amputechture
$7.29
| | Mars Volta De-Loused In The Comatorium CD (2003)
Amputechture
$11.49
| | Mars Volta Frances The Mute CD (2005)
Amputechture
$11.49
| | Mars Volta Scab Dates CD (2005)
Amputechture
$12.59
| | Tool 10,000 Days CD (2006)
Amputechture
$11.75
| | Mars Volta Bedlam In Goliath CD (2008)
Amputechture
$11.99
| | 1969: Velvet Underground Live Vol. 1 CD (1974)
Amputechture
$6.35 With Lou Reed
Personnel: Lou Reed (vocals, guitar); Doug Yule (vocals, bass); Sterling Morrison (guitar); Maureen Tucker (drums). Recorded live in Texas and San Fransisco in 1969. Includes liner notes by Elliott Murphy and Paul Nelson. This 2-LP set was split into 2 separate CDs. Though 1970 brought LOADED and (relative) commercial success for the Velvets, it also saw the beginning of their decline. Apparent commercial concessions and interpersonal tensions had already begun to tear the band apart at the seams. Their real peak came the year before, when--finding themselves halfway between artiness and pop pursuits--they dived headlong into amphetamine-fueled, minimalist-influenced proto-punk. The European influence had lessened with the departure of John Cale, ...
| | Dave Glasser Begin Again CD (2004)
Amputechture
$13.45
| | David Essex Rock on (Collectables) CD (2004)
Amputechture
$6.45
| | Freakwater Springtime CD (1998)
Amputechture
$11.59
| | C O B Moyshe Mcstiff & Tartan Lancers Of The Sacred Heart CD (1972)
Amputechture
$13.95 Additional Tracks
C.O.B.: Clive Palmer. Personnel: John Bidwell (vocals, whistling, guitar, balalaika, organ); Mickey "Tickey" Bennett (vocals, whistling, percussion, gong); Clive Palmer (vocals, guitar, balalaika, banjo, violin, clarinet). Liner Note Authors: Clive Palmer; Mickey "Tickey" Bennett; John Bidwell; Ralph McTell. Recording information: Air Studios, London, England (1972); Sound ...
| | Pablo Ruban Maldonado Almanjayar CD (2008) (Import)
Amputechture
$25.75 Born into a Gypsy family of flamenco artists in Granada, Spain including Pepe Albaicin, Mario Maya, José Carmona, and Antonio Cujón, founder of the Zambra, Pablo Rubén Maldonado took an unusual route when he chose to study the piano at the Conservatory of Music in Granada. Since then he has collaborated with and composed for artists and companies such as ‘Pura Pasión’ with Cristóbal Reyes, ‘Madre Coraje’ with La Tati, the New Spanish Ballet, Antonio and Manuel Reyes, Juan Andrés Maya, and Rafaela Carrasco.In 2007 Pablo was presented with the award for “ Best Composition for Dance†celebrated in the Teatro Albeniz, Madrid. ‘Almanjayar’ is Pablo\'s first album recorded in 2004 and was acclaimed by the critics.“He accompanies singing as if he were plucking the strings of a guitar†El PaÃs“ His themes are eminently rhythmic; bulerÃa, alegrÃa, jaleos, tangos, surge from the piano grounded in traditional flamenco with fascinating jazz influences†Alma 100In 2006 Pablo and his group performed in Washington for the Gala Hispanic Theatre’s flamenco festival. Paula Durbin of the Washington Post wrote \'Almanjáyar\': Flamenco With a Jazz Pulse \"The guitar might be the instrument most associated with flamenco, but the piano took center stage Friday and Saturday at the start of GALA Hispanic Theatre\'s second annual flamenco festival with Pablo ...
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