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Forum » Lost-In-Tyme » Prog - Kraut - Classic Rock - Blues..... » Magma (French) - 1976 - Inédits
Magma (French) - 1976 - Inédits
Opa-LokaDate: Friday, 23 May 2008, 17:19 | Message # 1
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Magma (French) - 1976 - Inédits

track list :
1. Sowiloh + KMX - E XII - Opus 3 (13:45) - Vander,Top
2. KMX - BXII - Opus 7 (6:13) - Top
3. Om Zanka (5:30) - Vander
4. Gamma (4:00) - Vander
5. Terrien Si Je T'ai Convoque (4:10) - Vander
6. Gamma Anteria (7:45) - Vander

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

Gerard Bikialko Keyboards (1,2,4,6)
Micky Grailler Keyboards (1,2,4)
Benoit Widemann Keyboards (3)
Francois Cahen Keyboards (5)
Jean Luc Manderlier Keyboards (5,6)
Francis Moze Bass (5)
Jean-Pierre Lambert Bass (6)
Janik Top Bass (1,2,4)
Bernard Paganotti Bass (3)
Claude Olmos Guitar (1,4)
Marc Fosset Guitar (6)
Gabriel Federow Guitar (3)
Didier Lockwood Violin (3)
Klaus Basquiz Vocals & Percussion
Rene Garber Vocals,Bass Clarinet (5,6)
Teddy Lasry Saxes (5)
Jeff Seffer Saxes (5)
Louis Toesca Trumpet (5)
Christian Vander Drums

NOTES: Live recordings spanning several years with varying lineups.


Biography

Perhaps the all-time peak of prog pretentiousness was when drummer Christian Vander, of the French band Magma, invented his own language to express the post-apocalyptic story lines of the band's albums. Despite the inherently unnecessary nature of this activity, it definitely contributed in the immense and overbearing atmosphere of Magma's music. The pioneering 70s French band was one of the most experimental, artistic and fiercely uncompromising bands of the progressive era. Their music combined elements of jazz, opera, minimalism and 20th century classical music into a highly idiosyncratic mix of exceedingly dark, yet emotionally rich and undeniably powerful sound that eventually brought on the Zeuhl sub-genre of progressive rock. Their expanded ensemble included heavy emphasis on horns and choirs. The compositional style of the group reflected a mastery of sophisticated musical concepts; their use of gradual repetition as a tension building tool was unparalleled, as well as subtle rhythmic innovations and minimalist techniques as atmospheric devices. Though the music will definitely sound exceedingly odd at first, just because they are so different from anything else, their sound has a certain addictive quality to it, and developing a taste for their eccentricity is not particularly difficult. All their albums fit together into some concept which causes them all to hang together. I'm not sure what the particulars are, but it has something to do with humanity leaving a desolate Earth for the new utopian world of Kobaia (hence Vander's language, Kobaian) and the complications that came along with the transition. Their first two albums, Magma and 1001 Centigrade, dealt more with a jazzier sensibility, and are comparatively lighter in tone than some of their later works. Magma's next work would kick off their most notable and distinctive period, the immense Mekanik Destructiw Kommandoh (MDK). This album features all the hallmarks for which Magma are recognized. Martial beats, militaristic pounding and a heavy emphasis on a huge, orchestral backdrop replete with choirs and layers of horns. The overall mood of doom, death and destruction is undeniable. The sound is carried over into a Vander solo album (in name only), Wurdah Itah, as well as their next opus, the magnificent Kohntarkosz, which features less vocal dependence but is an overall masterpiece of desolate moods and stark atmospheres. The live album, Hhai, is supposedly excellent, but I haven't heard it yet. After that, the albums from Udu Wudu on are something of a step down. Overall Magma produced some of the most important and groundbreaking music of the decade. - Greg Northrup [2002]


 
valvasDate: Wednesday, 14 January 2009, 17:40 | Message # 2
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Many thanks.

Added (14 January 2009, 17:40)
---------------------------------------------
I said Thanks but no link appears whatsoever....

 
Opa-LokaDate: Thursday, 15 January 2009, 00:30 | Message # 3
Rising Sun
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Read this : http://lost-in-tyme.ucoz.com/forum/7-11-1
Although it doesn't works exactly as it should...mostly because we don't use the forum....
 
dEDeDate: Thursday, 23 December 2010, 20:54 | Message # 4
Private Pink Dot
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Although I appreciated the main points of this review, I was annoyed that you started it with the old idiot /garbage line always repeated, that Vander's coining of his own language was the height of progressive pretentiousness. What a bunch of bunk! Can anyone think with his/her own mind, please?

Why not call this one of the most creative and elaborate projects popular music has seen? Why not marvel that Vander not only coined the language but held true to it for 40+ years? Why not realize that Kobaian adds an air of mystery and strangeness to Magma's music that it would not have if they sang in French? Why not just admit that Kobaian works like scat, more important for its sounds than its meaning, and with those sounds welded to the music? Why not think about all of the unique possibilities a language of one's own makes possible for the creation of music?

Why repeat the same old tired bullshit instead of thinking? What is pretentious about creating a language? Is it the lack of transparency? But what is pretentious about that? Is it the grandeur of the gesture? But if meaningful, it is not pretentious. angry

 
Forum » Lost-In-Tyme » Prog - Kraut - Classic Rock - Blues..... » Magma (French) - 1976 - Inédits
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