ILM's Now For Something Completely Different... 70s Album Poll Results! Top 100 Countdown! (Part 2)

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:)

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:29 (eleven years ago) link

I just realized with dread that not that many Fall albums have placed yet.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:30 (eleven years ago) link

um, only LATWT and Dragnet were pre-80 I think

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:31 (eleven years ago) link

9. ASH RA TEMPEL Ash Ra Tempel (4992 Points, 34 Votes, 1 #1)
RYM: #108 for 1971, #2769 overall

http://coverartgallery.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/ash-ra-tempel-ash-ra-tempel-1971.jpg

After a couple of aborted demo's Ash Ra Tempel decided to go to Hamburg and record an album proper, with the aid of Conny Plank. This resulted in their debut, which was housed in a mystical elaborate centre-opening gatefold cover. As with their live jams, Ash Ra Tempel on record was a unique twist on the space-rock music as pioneered by Pink Floyd and Hawkwind, with elements of both yet devoid of songs, free-rock in the truest sense. Just one track per side: firstly with the power-drive storming "Amboss" (close to Klaus' work in Tangerine Dream) and in contrast, the shimmering timeless "Traummaschine". A yin-and-yang type concept that made for an extraordinary album. But, not too long after this, with a yearning for greater things in life than just playing drums, Klaus Schulze left Ash Ra Tempel, saying to Manuel "You keep the name, I'm going to do other things" and went on to pursue a most fruitful solo career as one of the pioneers of synth music. -- Cosmic Egg

Heat-haze harmonics begin 'Amboss', the opening side long track of Ash Ra Tempel. Intense cymbals and frenzied rumbling bass catch a rhythm, ride it, then it descends once more. It is the power-trio playing as meditational force. When Klaus Schultze's drumming comes in after about three minutes, the thunder is highly charged and superfit, right on The Beat, bash bash bash. Then it's off on the wildest 20 minutes of freakout blitzkrieg. At one point, everything breaks down into a guitar blaze of feedback fed through FX for minutes on end, until the drums tear back in so crazily and in comes Larry Graham's bass playing of the Swoopingest kind. Oh fuck man, this is the greatest Detroit-est trip of all time. Not a heavy metal assault but a methodical breaking down of all your senses until you are crushed and insensible. And if Side 1 pulverised you, then the 25 minute 'Traummaschine (Dream Machine)' lets you lie there in the afterglow and never disturbs you beyond the slightest disruption of Vibrations. A percussionless dreamscape of sounds cascades around the room, and a wailing woman-voiced beauty fills the air. Then, rising out of the peace comes the guitar shimmer and finally the hollow congas of Klaus Schultze. And the fuzz beauty of Manuel Gottsching's guitar scythed all down the great rush through space. Then it's off into yet another inspiring dimension as Ash Ra Tempel fly around the universe... Ash Ra Tempel is at its greatest when it's impossible to work out what instrument makes which sound.

It's one of the greatest rock 'n' roll LPs ever made.  -- J. Cope

Just two long tracks, “Amboss” is a massively heavy guitar freakout, while “Traummaschine (Dream Machine)” is all floaty afterglow. Cope calls it “one of the greatest rock ‘n’ roll LPs ever made.” No doubt. Schwingungen (1972) is nearly as great, and was reissued in 2003 as a deluxe edition by Cleopatra. For fans only is 7Up (1973), their collaboration with acid guru Timothy Leary. -- Fastnbulbous


review
[-] by Ned Raggett

In light of the 1990s post-rock scene and the often clear links back to Krautrock of all stripes, Ash Ra Tempel's monster debut album stands as being both astonishingly prescient and just flat out good, a logical extension of the space-jam-freakout ethos into rarified realms. Featuring the original trio of Enke, Gottsching and Schulze, Ash Ra Tempel consists of only two side-long tracks, both of which are gripping examples of technical ability mixed with rock power. If more progressive music was like it, there wouldn't be as many continuing complaints about that genre as a whole. "Amboss" contains the more upfront explosions of sound, though it mixes in restraint as much as crunch. Starting with Gottsching's extended guitar notes and Schulze's cymbals, it begins with a slow, ominous build that is equally haunting, as mysterious as the cryptic artwork of temples and figures found on the inside. Quick, rumbling drums slowly fade up some minutes in, with more crashing guitar mixing in with the previous tones, creating a disorienting drone experience. The active jam then takes over the rest of the song at the point, the three going off just as they want to (Gottsching's soloing in particular is fantastic) before all coming back together for an explosive, shuddering series of climaxes. "Traummaschine," in marked contrast, is a quieter affair, with Gottsching's deep drones setting and continuing the tone throughout. Fading in bit by bit, the guitars are accompanied by equally mesmerizing keyboards from Schulze, creating something that calls to mind everything from Eno's ambient works to Lull's doom-laden soundscapes and, after more distinct guitar pluckings start to surface, Flying Saucer Attack's rural psychedelia. Halfway through, soft percussion blends with the music to create a gentle but persistent intensity, cue for a series of shifts between calmer and more active sections, but all kept more restrained than on "Amboss."

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:31 (eleven years ago) link

Ha! Great album.

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:31 (eleven years ago) link

um, only LATWT and Dragnet were pre-80 I think

OK, that's relieving.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:31 (eleven years ago) link

Cool. Not too low, though.

emil.y, Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:32 (eleven years ago) link

not better than warm jets, ege bamyasi, there's a riot goin on &c... but vg

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:33 (eleven years ago) link

this poll is bombarding me with things I really want to hear! ash ra tempel reads alluringly

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:33 (eleven years ago) link

yesssssss one of my fave finds from the pre-rollout campaigning.

Eamon Dool Two (Mr Andy M), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:34 (eleven years ago) link

Fucking AMBOSS. Nothing more needs said.

Eamon Dool Two (Mr Andy M), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:35 (eleven years ago) link

That first Ash Ra kinda reminds me of "Jack Johnson" - first a rockin side, then a nice calm ambient side

Sir Lord Baltimora (Myonga Vön Bontee), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:35 (eleven years ago) link

surprisingly high! n.b. i like it plenty

acid in the style of tenpole tudor (NickB), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:35 (eleven years ago) link

btw Dirt is the best Fun House track so far, gorgeous

ash ra tempel writeup makes it seem like the classic rock era's answer to super roots 7

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:36 (eleven years ago) link

(which is one of the best things ever)

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:36 (eleven years ago) link

dirt is great but has been surpassed by the cherry thing cover

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:38 (eleven years ago) link

oh was that the one in the tracks poll that I went mad about

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:40 (eleven years ago) link

that'd be dream baby dream, their suicide cover!

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:41 (eleven years ago) link

(also better than the orig imo)

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:41 (eleven years ago) link

actually I like both versions of dirt about the same I think

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:42 (eleven years ago) link

also better than the orig imo)

that neneh cherry cover of dream baby dream? no!!!!! it completely loses the point of the original.

stirmonster, Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:43 (eleven years ago) link

they've found a sax player for side 2. approve.

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:44 (eleven years ago) link

eh it's different but also fantastic imo xp

Newgod.css (seandalai), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:44 (eleven years ago) link

but gains the point of the cover! xxp

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:44 (eleven years ago) link

8. HAWKWIND Space Ritual (5083 Points, 33 Votes, 2 #1s)
RYM: #17 for 1973, #466 overall | Acclaimed: #1770

http://cps-static.rovicorp.com/3/JPG_500/MI0001/949/MI0001949284.jpg?partner=allrovi.com
http://open.spotify.com/album/7wH3vXQZgy9a6PUvMXLayk
spotify:album:7wH3vXQZgy9a6PUvMXLayk

http://img.cdandlp.com/2012/10/imgL/115596919-2.jpg
http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y183/lilly666/records025.jpg

Earlier the same year, Hawkwind had played at a London benefit concert for the Greasy Truckers, an alternative music organization. The subsequent double live album included a full side of Hawkwind but, more significantly, an outtake from it, the queerly poppy space- chug "Silver Machine." Penned by Brock (under his then- wife's name), it was released as a single and became Hawkwind's only UK hit — a huge one, which didn't appear on LP until years later. That success financed the tour chronicled on Space Ritual. The double live LP (from London and Liverpool) includes versions of "Master of the Universe" and two-thirds ofDoremi's songs (although two had chunks cut out); the new material included Calvert and Brock's synth-embroidered recitations of scary scenarios (e.g., the armageddon classic "Sonic Attack") penned by Calvert and their new buddy, noted sci- fi novelist Michael Moorcock. The LP is solid to super, and not as longwinded as you might imagine. -- Trouser Press

You never see any Hawkwind albums in bargain bins because they never get there. The unsold copies are apparently re-released with gaudy new covers and resold at regular prices. And that simply makes Space Ritual twice, because this is a double package. For the benefit of those who insist this is truly a new LP set, please note that the bassist is still playing his same two notes...The group's real efforts seem to go into making up the record-album covers. This one folds six separate times before it's capable of holding the album intact. At the very least, Hawkwind's continued existence proves that somebody out there is still doing acid. -- Alan Niester, RS

Alan Niester does not seem to realize that this is a live album. And in spite of his idiotic review, I would go so far as to say that this is one of the few cases where a live album is the band's definitive recording.

Hawkwind is a loose collective of David Brock and whoever he happens to be playing with - members of the band have ranged from Robert Calvert to Lemmy to Ginger Baker. The one consistent feature throughout Hawkwind's four decade existence, though, is the hopeless indulgence of this band. The twenty minute suites, the sword and sorcery lyrics and "mystic" poetry recitations interspersed throughout the band's live show - one of their best songs is called "Master of the Universe" for chrissake - all of these things have relegated Hawkwind to cult status in the U.S. But somehow, instead of a liability, Brock's penchant for excess, which is practically Hawkwind's defining quality, is actually this band's greatest strength. However ridiculous the subject matter of the songs, at their best, this band's gargantuan, consuming sound is simply awesome.

John Swenson rated every Hawkwind LP one star in the RS Record Guide, save the debut (their worst album!), which he gave two stars. Swenson wrote: "Concept overshadows the music pretty drastically throughout the Hawkwind opus, and whatever social importance the band might have been credited with has dissipated over the years. Anachronistically, they still plug on." I would say this description completely mischaracterizes the band - if anything, the lyrics are merely a set piece for David Brock's phenomenal, otherworldly guitar playing.

Lester Bangs was seemingly the only RS critic that didn't completely loathe Hawkwind. He reviewed the band's second album, In Search of Space, in the 6/22/72 issue:

"If you're glad that most of that stuff is part of the past now, you'll probably think this album is a pile of dogshit. If, on the other hand, you remember the absolute glee of filling your skull with all those squawks and shrieks and backwards-tapes and telegraphic open-tuned bridges between indescribable inner worlds conjured best neither by this music nor psychedeliteful elixirs but rather by a fortuitous combination of the two - if that was one of your favorite eras in the decline of Western Civilization, then you'd better glom onto this album... which may not be rock 'n' roll, but certainly beats "Fire 'n' Rain.""

Fair enough, though I resent the insinuation that you have to be in a "psychedeliteful" haze to enjoy this music.

As Joe Carducci wrote in his Psychozoic Hymnal: "Brock's guitar provided a heavily distorted wall of sound that rose and fell as if it were some bonehead bass line. Lemmy's bass with its high end distortion would roam around carrying the melody with it. Nick Turner played two or maybe three note patterns on the sax that would fade in and then fade out like old Nick was only orbiting this planet. Terry Ollis or Simon King on drums would keep up a straight pulsing pattern. Dik Mik, Del Dettmar and Simon House might then add odd spiraling electronic noises - strictly low tech action - or they might have to help the roadies keep Brock and Turner propped up. Bob Calvert or Michael Moorcock might be found jabbering on about Vikings and space maidens over the top of it all. And all together it sounded great - a soaring, psychedelic hard rock drone. The fourth album, a live double titled, Space Ritual, is a viable substitute for actually getting wasted yourself."

Hawkwind was omitted from the third and subsequent editions of the guide. -- schmidtt, Rolling Stone's 500 Worst Reviews of All Time

...released the excellent album Doremi Fasol Latido in November and a month later staged the concerts from which Space Ritual was comprised. Hawkwind's visual side was always a large part of their concert event, from Liquid Len's kaleidoscopic light show to Amazonian dancer Stacia, the so-called "Barbarella of Notting Hill Gate." Although this was reduced to a foldout gatefold cover, the double-album still presents the full-on live Hawkwind trip over four glorious sides of vinyl. Some of the material was from previous albums, some new, but none of that really matters. Throughout, the chug-a-chug rhythm of Lemmy and King is relentless as Hawkwind's pace rock drives forward; the atmospheric synthesizers of Dik Mik and Del Dettmar and the spoken word of Bob Calvert, quite reminiscent of Arthur Brown here, provide interlude. Certainly closer to heavy metal than anything prog rock, Hawkwind's sound is definitely guilty of being monochromatic; but never mind, the songs never really begin or end - the whole ship takes off and at the end of the journey it stops, it s grittiness always rendering it both genuine and enduring. The album reached No. 9 in the UK. Later in the year, Hawkwind toured the US for the first time. -- C. Snider

Hawkwind had been traveling long and hard on the road and in (and out) of their minds for the previous two years, and their sound reflected this by getting harder, louder and faster. And it was all captured on this beautiful, psychic roar-out of a double live set. Culled from recordings made at The Liverpool Empire and The Brixton Sundown in late December, 1972, two tracks were so long they needed to be edited down to into order to fit the whole shebang onto two albums. Ads promoted it as “88 minutes of brain damage” and “Space Ritual” did not disappoint, outside or in: the cover housing these two discs folded out into a double-sided 24” x 36” poster of scientific miscellany, obscure quotes merged with colourful sci-fi pop art from the ever-wonderful Barney Bubbles. All but two songs from their previous studio album, “Doremi Fasol Latido” are present and given strenuous workouts: stretched out beyond all recognition into space metal jamming sprees that took off and never came back. The sheer power of the repetition represented here become mantra-like walls of sound, all held together by Dave Brock’s sonic mortar guitar and the stunning rhythm section of Lemmy Kilminster on bass and Simon King on stamina-driven drums that (according to one recent source) hit 250 beats per minute! They are joined by Nik Turner on sax and vocals, Robert Calvert on spoken link incantations, and electronics duo Dikmik and Del Dettmar on audio generator and synthesizer, respectively. They were joined in these and many of their performances throughout the first part of the seventies by Stacia, their dancer immortalised on the cover as a naked astral mama proffering fireballs flanked by two equally fiery dragons.

The opening track, “Earth Calling” is a brief spoken passage that smears right into the Calvert composition, “Born To Go”: a barnstormer deluxe that for nearly ten minutes immediately loses you in a blur of distorted metal guitar repeat patterning and quick, pulsating rhythms. “Lord Of Light” is another example of this consciousness-altering, repetitious zone-out. Its holding pattern continues for half the album side it kicks off as a huge battering ram making its way across the universe as it gathers momentum and finally lands on the back of your head. Huge, patterning shapes appear and disappear; galaxies collide in slow motion and are all driven by Lemmy’s neck-snapping pulsebass: as architecturally perfect as they are full-blown rockin’. Another Calvert original, “Orgone Accumulator,” is a tripping cousin of “Green Onions” gone horribly awry. Just about every word in the English language that rhymed with ‘accumulator’ were used by Calvert for the lyrics to this space-boogie stomp -- ‘greater,’ ‘later,’ ‘integrator’, ‘isolator,’ ‘stimulator,’ ‘vibrator,’ etc. -- and it continues like this for a very long time, singular in its purpose. “Sonic Attack” is a psychotic rant orally transmitted by the self-styled space age poet, Robert Calvert in a furious manner that is both sinister and funny, and it trails off -- BLAM -- Right into a version of “Time We Left This World Today” even more disorientating and nausea-inducing than its studio counterpart. You can practically see the strobes start up.

“Brainstorm” is a heat-seeking missile to the centre of your cerebral cortex: more relentless, distorted riffing with unbalanced electronics over pagan-simple drums all race to the end of each chorus, where they trail off like comets…only to start up all over again as they gun full blast into the next dimension with thrusters full on as Starship Hawkwind begins to buckle with metal fatigue. This interstellar rollercoaster ride repeats for what seems the quickest eternity until it breaks down a final time to wild cheering and applause. ”Welcome To Future” ends the album, with evocative oratory from Calvert. It ends (of course) in a massive burnout of distortion, feedback and electronic swirls to wild applause. This is Hawkwind’s best album...Sorry, man, I seem to have dropped my mandies... -- The Seth Man, Head Heritage

I interviewed Luke Haines for Noisey last year and, naturally, talk turned to Hawkwind, or as he called them the band that Pink Floyd could have been, if they'd been less middle class and shit. (At least I think that's what he said, it was a very odd morning.) I also asked him what people should do to remember the recently departed Huw Lloyd-Langton and he replied simply, "Levitate" in reference to the band's excellent 1980 album Levitation. After you have done this you could celebrate your return to Terra Firma with a blast of this astounding 1973 live set recorded in London and Liverpool. Lloyd-Langton wasn't part of the line-up at this point, having departed to play guitar for Leo Sayer, but regardless this, to many, is the ultimate space rock artefact: bonkers Bob Calvert poetry, whirring hyperdrive oscillators, interstellar dust cloud flute solos, a performance piece written by sci-fi author Michael Moorcock ['Sonic Attack'], a starship hull blistering performance of 'Space Is Deep' and the unstoppable cider, amphetamine and motor oil chug of 'Orgone Accumulator', all linked into a preposterous tale of astronauts traversing the galaxy in hypersleep, and encased in fantastic faux art deco packaging, based on Hawkwind's painted Amazonian dancer Stacia, pictured with plasma flowing from her fingertips flanked by giant firey eagles and what appear to be golden space leopards. -- John Doran, The Quietus

Featuring the classic lineup of guitarist/vocalist (and founder) Dave Brock, poet Robert Calvert, saxophonist/flautist Nik Turner, bassist Lemmy Kilmister, drummer Simon King, synth player Del Dettmar, and electronics man DikMik, this double live album is Hawkwind's magnum opus and perhaps the ultimate sonic trip.

Devised by Calvert, the urban guerillas' 1972 tour was a multimedia concept involving naked dancers, cosmic stage design and costume, and a kaleidoscopic lights and lasers show. Songs from the group's second and third LPs, In Search of Space and Doremi Fasol Latido, were linked by eerie sound collages and spoken-word pieces. These formed a pseudo-operatic narrative about seven cosmonauts traveling in a state of suspended animation. That said, it is the musical anthems that provide the highlights on disc. "Born To Go" and the pulverizing "Brainstorm" are driven by metronomic bass and marinated in whooshing effects. The phased and confused "Orgone Accumulator" and blissed-out "Space Is Deep" create a more lysergic ambience, while contrasting "Master Of The Universe" is a brain-frying piledriver composed of hypno-metal riff, intergalactic oscillator grooves, and comic book fantasy.

Hawkwind continued to release great records throughout the 1970s, but later decades saw a number of personnel changes and dodgy "official bootlegs" diminish their status (although Brock is still plugging away). Nevertheless, their audiovisual presentation has proved hugely influential. -- Manish Agerwal, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die


review
[-] by Wilson Neate

Recorded live in December 1972 and released the following year, Space Ritual is an excellent document of Hawkwind's classic lineup, underscoring the group's status as space rock pioneers. As the quintessential "people's band," Hawkwind carried '60s countercultural idealism into the '70s, gigging constantly, playing wherever there was an audience, and even playing for free on five consecutive days outside the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival. The band's multimedia performances were the perfect accompaniment for exploring inner space and imagining outer space. While not concerned with rock's material trappings, Hawkwind were, ironically, among the hardest-working groups in Britain, averaging one show every three days during the year preceding these recordings. Given all that practice, it's not surprising that the performances collected here are incredibly tight (although, reportedly, a couple of tracks were edited). Incorporating most of Doremi Fasol Latido, the show for the Space Ritual tour was conceived as a space rock opera, its blend of sci-fi electronics, mesmerizing psy-fi grooves, and heavy, earthbound jamming punctuated with spoken word interludes from astral poet Bob Calvert. Although his intergalactic musings date the album, coming across now as camp futurism, they still provide fitting atmospheric preambles to Hawkwind's astounding, mind-warping sounds. Calvert's manic recital of Michael Moorcock's "Sonic Attack," for instance, is an exercise in tension that subsequently explodes on the stomping "Time We Left This World Today"; with Nik Turner's otherworldly sax, Dave Brock's guitar distortion, and the earth-moving rhythm section of Simon King and Lemmy, this track offers a blueprint for the album's most potent material. Another standout is "Orgone Accumulator," ten minutes of hypnotic (Wilhelm) Reich & roll that could be the missing link between Booker T. and Stereolab. A 1973 advertisement described Space Ritual as "88 minutes of brain damage"; that characterization still holds true.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:45 (eleven years ago) link

it's essentially the same album, same performances, different track order, heavier drops "the last one" from live 77, and yeah they're mastered differently but it's good enough for government work

― unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, March 28, 2013 2:19 PM (25 minutes ago)

ah, ok! it's funny all their stuff is slight variations on the same 10 songs or so, so i took those minor differences to signal an entirely different performance.

ryan, Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:45 (eleven years ago) link

No f-in' way is the Cherry Thing cover of 'Dream Baby Dream' better than the original.

emil.y, Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:46 (eleven years ago) link

Surprised Space Ritual is so high, but it is super-ace-awesome-wicked.

emil.y, Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:46 (eleven years ago) link

she sucks all the empathy out of the song. xp

anyway, BOOM! space ritual my number one. yay!

stirmonster, Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:47 (eleven years ago) link

was looking forward to a baffled xgau review of space ritual but ok

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:47 (eleven years ago) link

Back for a sec, back to meeting in 15 min. Looks like everyone was surprised by Groundhogs, but no surprise that anyone checking it out seems impressed.

Fun House was my #1 too. Definitely the most #1s so far, by far. I'm always surprised when it doesn't top every poll!

Ash Ra Tempel! Copey's presence really looms large in this poll -- I bet a lot of these albums wouldn't have placed at all if it weren't for his tireless advocacy these past 15+ years. I think I like him better as a writer at this point than a musician!

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:47 (eleven years ago) link

Born To Go destroyed me when I first heard it a few months ago. The rest was good, but sheesh that opening blast

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:48 (eleven years ago) link

Xgau's only review of Hawkwind is of Quark, Strangeness and Charm:

In the old days, this likable British band played more benefits than Joan Baez and helped give psychedelic rock its bad name--when you repeat three chords in 4/4 for forty-five minutes, it's politic to change riffs once in a while. Yet they're still around, and good for them. Here they manage to spread six songs over eight cuts--a trick accomplished by granting two rather ponderous jams names and numbers of their own--as well as introducing more substantial innovations: for every song there's a good new riff, and by now the old sci-fi/counterculture themes mean something, probably because lyricist Robert Calvert has gained wit and wisdom since the time of zonk. Irresistible: the title cut, which suggests that Einstein had trouble with girls because he didn't dig subatomic physics. B+

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:49 (eleven years ago) link

she sucks all the empathy out of the song. xp

oh wow, we're gonna have to agree to disagree here I think!

space ritual is great! not better than &c...

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:50 (eleven years ago) link

Space Ritual another massive find through the noms/campaigning, such an addictive listen.
SPACE IS THE ABSENCE OF TIME AND OF MATTER.

Eamon Dool Two (Mr Andy M), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:51 (eleven years ago) link

Space Ritual blows away even people who never cared for Hawkwind. Its such a monster of an album.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:51 (eleven years ago) link

LA Blues is ripping off the white-noise thing Spiritualized do at every gig. Pathetic.

(yes it's really, really great :D)

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:55 (eleven years ago) link

o jesus the bit where the drums pull back and the feedback spirals up and then the drums tumble back in

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:55 (eleven years ago) link

7. AMON DÜÜL II Yeti (5220 Points, 39 Votes, 1 #1)
RYM: #23 for 1970, #491 overall | Acclaimed: #1838

http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_ltehef9Yjn1qe8ld6o1_1280.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/5R7yVKn7rnv3LmifNqO8j6
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Their sophomore effort, the double album Yeti, is regarded by most as their definitive album and as the one that brought Amon Duul II to realize their full potential as improvisers. The lengthy "Soap Shop Rock" upon its 3 parts, resembles the earlier work of King Crimson in its transition from lyrical emphasized parts into more musically aggressive ones. Impressive no less are "Yeti" and "Yeti Talks to Yogi" -- both long and fantastic Space Rock improvisations of the kind that makes you forget which planet you are on. Even in the shorter tracks the band managers to realize an impressive psychedelic vision and the menacing "Archangel Thunderbird" and the delicate, almost Folk-like "Cerberus" are of particular quality to back this claim up. 1970 was a great year for Amon Duul II: Despite several of its members left in order to join different projects (Shrat formed Sameti while the British Anderson returned to England to join Hawkwind), the band had a fantastic album under its belt and was also chosen as the best underground group by the readers of Musical Express magazine. -- R. Chelled

There's lots of other classic material on these doubles (naturally!) and not least the second side of YETI which has some of the most mind-bending psychedelic music on record. And, let's not forget the weirdly twisted songs that were as surreal as the music they were contained in! There's so much weird invention in these records that eludes some, especially in the use of electronics and collage, all woven into forays of guitars, violin, drums and magnificent keyboards. These records sizzle and astound as much today as they ever did. -- Cosmic Egg

This epic double-album was to change everything for them. And in Britain, they were soon to become heroes of the underground. The John Peel Show, already champion of so much German music, embraced Yeti with real love and blasted Amon Duul II's long epics across the British night into every young Head's pad (or bedroom if you were 13 as I was then). Even the sleeve of Yeti showed that it was a confident ground-breaking record. This was the first of the Falk-Ulrich Rogner's slide projection covers, and the star was Shrat the bongo-player, with his weird low forehead and a strange peasant dress, wielding a huge scythe across a field of bright yellow ground fog; the Grimreaper as a Krautrocker. IT was a mesmerizing image, and one which should stay with them throughout their career, though Shrat would quit soon after. Indeed Amon Duul themselves understood the power of the Shrat image because it became their future logo. Though their sound was pared down to just one drummer and one bongo player, still the ancient Egyptian mystery was achieved in the magical swirl of the music. Yeti was a fabulous double-album - 68 minutes of some of the greatest Krautrock ever. The first record was filled with terrifying mini-epics; "Soap Shop Rock," the wiry medley, with the ridiculously named "Flesh-Coloured Anti-Aircraft Alarm"; six minutes of mythical fear-inducing magic tales. What the hell is going on in that song? Something scary is implied but the precise meaning always eludes me. But the greatest of all their punk songs is "Archangel's Thunderbird," the car that Renate implores everyone to drive over a "Louie Louie" Boeing 747 riff that has them come in late on the breakdown, kind of like Jim Morrison's famous live TV fluff on "Touch Me." I love that they kept it in. IT shows such of-the moment confidence. The drumming is not rock 'n' roll at all, though who knows what it is. IT crashes in and out of the beat, sometimes sounding like a musician playing a different song, only for the beat to inexorably return. And Yeti is Amon Duul II's greatest improvisation LP of all. The three very long tracks are organic and sensational, the side long title-track is an epic piece of turbulent out-there Kosmische Musik. But my favourite piece is easily "Sandoz in the Rain," on which both Amon Duul II and members of Amon Duul I were re-united. This beautiful song is very reminiscent of the sound of Amon Duul I's then current Paradieswarts Duul LP. IT may be because of the eerie-beautiful rock 'n' roll fake English that Rainer Bauer sings. -- J. Cope

After the sprawling chaos of 1969 debut 'Phallus Dei' comes the double album 'Yeti' which to me is the best thing they ever did and in no way could ever match. Led by two singer/guitarists Chris Karrer and John Weinzierl Amon Duul II combined dissonance and melody add drugs in the mix and out comes 'YETI'.

The album begins with the 13 minute suite of 'Soapshop Rock' which is divided into 4 segments, the first segment A)'Burning sister' rumbles with great riffs,insane lyrics and bouncing octavetastic bass from future Hawkwind member Dave Anderson.B)'Halluzination guillotine' slows the pace with eastern tinged guitar licks and powerful sparse drums.Things turn silly for the pointless C)Gulp A Sonata and the band round things up with with final attack of last part/reprise of D)Flesh Coloured Anti-Aircraft Alarm.

'Archangel Thunderbird' is a great rock n roll song sung by the German version of Grace Slick Miss Renate Knaup whose vocals and lyrics struggle to keep up with the riff but its a belter of a song nonetheless.

Things mellow out for acoustic flavoured 'She Came through the Chimney' the vibe begins to slowly darken with more eastern influences the driving 'Cerberus' the menacing 'The Return Of Rubezahl' and the truly weird slow stoner riffs and creepy robotic vocals of 'Eye Shaking King' and Kraut experiment of 'Pale Gallery'.

The last 3 songs of Yeti are the much maligned improvisations which are the 18 minute title track,'Yeti Talks to Yogi' and last song 'Sandoz in the rain'.I admit these improvs took a few listens but after getting used to them they reveal wonders in their madness.I couldn't stop listening to this album and its one of my all time favourites cos of it's scope and don't give a fuck attitude.Great guitars,fucked up vocals and experimental acid rock,a double album thats fascinating from start to finish.Highly recommended -- Kaktus, Head Heritage

Among the influences and its fans including Julian Cope (thanks for getting me into this band!), a band that was completely ahead of their time and never got the experiemental scene of the early '70s going in their hometown in Germany. Alongside Krautrock legends including; Tangerine Dream, CAN, Faust, Ash Ra Tempel, and NEU!, the band that deserves the attention the most is defintely Amon Duul II. From the ashes of the Amon Duul, Amon Duul II had a taste of bizarre science-fiction rock music, psychedelic jam sessions, and folky fiddlers pounding away like fucking psychopaths at the end of the flower generation of the '60s and into the '70s. 

The group followed up their freak-out album which was an answer to the Grateful Dead with the release of Phallus Dei (God's Penis) in 1969 and into their second album Yeti, a dynamic strange album which features a cover of the grim reaper looking more anti-hippie than ever, they pushed the envelope very, VERY, VERY FAR! With guitarist and violinist Chris Karrer, guitar and pianist John Weinzeri, bassist Lothar Meid, drummer Peter Leopold, keyboardist Falk U Rogner, and germany's answer to Grace Slick of the '70s, Renate Knaup-Krroetenschwanz to the mix, was a pefrect combination of heavy volume acid folk music gone horribly wrong.

Amon Duul II at the time were a cult band in the '70s drawing word-of-mouth from supporters including David Bowie and Rolling Stone critic Lester Bangs in which he says 'There has never been a group quite like Amon Düül II before, and there may never be another to transmute so many sounds ever again.' Turns out that he was 100% right. I mean you'll never see them performing at gigantic stadiums and selling out to the fucking mainstream bullshit you see on MTV and VH1. Anyway, back to Yeti. This album, turn this motherfucker up to 100 and make sure you take a shitload of acid and LSD while putting you're headphones on to this stoner krautrock masterpiece over 13 tracks to make you go apeshit over.

With fuzztone guitars and vocals, sinister violin sounds coming from an alternate soundtrack of the Wicker Man, Yeti was germany's answer to the Prog Rock genre and of course the beginning of the Krautrock-era. Strangely, Musically, it pushed the buttons that derserved to be pushed arrangement and composition's that you'll never hear in any Frank Zappa album. The 3-minute garage rocker Burning Sister which had become a kind of a live favorite for them in their Live in London album, is certainly a proto-hard rock killer with psychedelic guitar solos and dynamic drum work to fill the void as it segues to Halluzination Guillotine to close up the sequel with its trippy vocals, bass lines which almost sounded like Pink Floyd's Careful with that Axe Eugene as Chris does a dark montone singing vocals as he sings about the 15th centuries gorefest killings while Renate does some witchy vocals that seemed like it was too scary for halloween, but perfect for a horrorshow. 

Gulp a Sonata is basically guitar and Renate and Chris own take to do their own homage of Operattic vocals and the fiddle sounding like a movie soundtrack as it goes into the 6-minute Flesh-Coloured Anti-Aircraft Alarm, a pasaging trouble funeral music gone haywire, not bombastic than Steve Howe's guitar and Darryl Way's fiddling can't stop it, the track goes into an darker folk music with its Anti-Vietnam message as it goes into a space trip mode at the very end into a freak-out mode and then repeating the notes from the opening introduction of Burning Sister as it ends with the fiddle; it seemed that Karrer decided to leave that at the last minute to give you a suprise moment for a brief second. She Came Through the Chimney starts off as an Indian pasage and its Quicksilver Messenger Service guitar solos while Karrer does some disturbing noises on the violin that would make your ears screech and bleed really hard for this insturmental passage. 

And then we go right into a proto punk rock style with Archangel Thunderbird as Renate takes over the vocals which almost sound very gothic and very Night on Bald Mountain for her to sing her heart out which has more of darker view of the apocalypse of war while Cerebus becomes more of a fast-sped Robert Fripp acoustic folk music at first and then becomes a fuzztone dimension. The Return of Rubezahl becomes an egyptian rock sound and almost coming out of a japanese rock album for the industrial-era as it moves into Eye Shaking King, a dark vicious piece which has a fuzzy vocals that you almost couldn't understand what Karrer is saying but the instruments follow him into a pool of blood parade that would have made Robert Calvert and Hawkwind proud while Pale Gallery features Rogner's 2-minute homage to Tangerine Dream's Electronic Meditation on the keyboards. 

Then we go right into the mysterious groundbreaking quality of epic proportions with the self-titled track for 18-minutes of an alternate crossover of a heavy psych sounds of Frank Zappa meets Varese in German style. It has the same combinations of Phallus Dei, but more black and very oddly normal than your typical Krautrock album. It begins with the drums and guitar doing their homages to Africa and India as the keyboards sound almost like something out of Interstellar Overdrive and then guitarists Kerrer and Weinzeri take over a do a battle of the guitars and it isn't just a guitar battle, but more of who's got the guts to battle over who does a heavy job to be the best cult guitar player ever egyptian style! Then the drums come in to calm them down and the bass comes in as Karrer and Renate sings about the god while Weinzeri does some heavy virtuoso guitar solos than ever before alongside Michael Karoli, Hendrix, and Manuel Gottsching. 

And then the last 3-minutes, it calms down into a laser show with the wah-wah setting the scenery of psychedelic colors on the instrumentations to set a dynamic and shattering movements that seemed very odd for the 13th century that seemed ancient for the slaves to play with their heads and looking over the horizon to see this band playing their hearts out for them to be free and enjoying the music which almost reminds me a little bit of Pink Floyd's Fat Old Sun. And then it becomes even more aggressive with Yeti Talks to Yogi. This is an improvisation that you MUST hear from beginning to end. In the midsection Leopold takes over on the drums like a mad scientist while the guitars rhythmically does a chugging on the wah-wah a few seconds as Falk's keyboards do some groovy ambient noises to fill up the entire album very Rick Wrightish that was almost left off the Ummagumma composition, Sysyphus. And then the guitars come in as the Bass does some solos to do something that seemed weird but fucked up in a good way. 

And then it becomes aggressive again with the instruments fighting one by one as the vocalists do a heavy background style that almost deals with death and the end of the world. The last track Sandoz in the Rain is again very acid folk meets Comus' First Utterance. Guitars seemed like their doing their own compositions strumming and fingerpicking at the same time while the flute does an indian solo while Karrer sings like a madman and very calm that could have defintely been a part of Black Sabbath's Solitude from the Masters of Reality album. Strange, Vicious, and Dark at the same time. This is Amon Duul II's essential lost treasure of Krautrock and Prog's adventures in the mysterious dark cave. -- Zmanathanson, Head Heritage

Grown like fungus from a harry, hippie commune, the first incarnation managed one decent album in Paradieswärts Düül. However, it’s the offshoot that produced the most awe-inspiring music, starting with Phallus Dei (1969), translating to “God’s Cock.” Yeti is even better, both heavier (lurching psychedelic guitar freakouts) and prettier (“Sandoz in the Rain”).Dance Of The Lemmings (1971) is more fragmented and contentious. Some think it’s their best, Cope thinks it’s a “pile of pedestrian shit.” I’d say it’s their fifth best and leave it at that. Carnival In Babylon and Wolf City (1972) are much different, with acoustic guitars and slightly more structured songwriting. Some swear by these as their best. Repertoire reissued the first three, remastered with bonus tracks, and Revisited did later albums in similarly lush digipacks.  -- Fastnbulbous


review
[-] by Stewart Mason

The second album by Amon Düül II (not to be confused with the more anarchic radicals Amon Düül), 1970's Yeti, is their first masterpiece, one of the defining early albums of Krautrock. A double album on vinyl, Yeti consists of a set of structured songs and a second disc of improvisations. It's testament to the group's fluidity and improvisational grace that the two albums don't actually sound that different from each other, and that the improvisational disc may actually be even better than the composed disc. The first disc opens with "Soap Shop Rock," a 12-minute suite that recalls King Crimson's early work in the way it switches easily between lyrical, contemplative passages and a more violent, charging sound, and continues through a series of six more songs in the two- to six-minute range, from the ominous, threatening "Archangels Thunderbird" (featuring a great doomy vocal by mono-named female singer Renate) to the delicate, almost folky acoustic tune "Cerberus." The improvisational disc contains only three tracks, closing with a nine-minute stunner called "Sandoz in the Rain" that's considered by many to be the birth of the entire space rock subgenre. A delicate, almost ambient wash of sound featuring delicately strummed phased acoustic guitars and a meandering flute, it's possibly the high point of Amon Düül II's entire career. [Most CD issues have squeezed the two discs onto one CD by cutting three minutes out of "Pale Gallery," but the Captain Trips CD restores it to its full five-minute length.]

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:00 (eleven years ago) link

Copey's presence really looms large in this poll -- I bet a lot of these albums wouldn't have placed at all if it weren't for his tireless advocacy these past 15+ years. I think I like him better as a writer at this point than a musician!

― Fastnbulbous, Thursday, March 28, 2013 7:47 PM (11 minutes ago)

I've read two books by this guy but haven't heard a lick of his music. Where to start, if at all?

(oh look, another of his recommendations!!)

today's tom soy yum, mean mean thai (Spectrist), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:03 (eleven years ago) link

listen to Fried and Jehovahkill before dismissing him, at least - they're sublime

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:04 (eleven years ago) link

and the 1st teardrop explodes!

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:06 (eleven years ago) link

I think Cope overrates his contribution to musical knowledge. He often behaves as if he really was the first person to discover a lot of these bands. Also, while I think Krautrocksampler is a great little book, I disagree with a lot of his assessments.

emil.y, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:07 (eleven years ago) link

start with Fried and make sure you get or hear the version with Land Of Fear as a bonus track

Jehovahkill is longer, denser and more Krautastic, needs a few more listens perhaps, but is probably even better

2nd Teardrop Explodes has an unbelievable final pair of tracks

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:07 (eleven years ago) link

I walked past mr cope at atp once, it was about 8am & we were both walking back to our chalets after the usual abuse. He said good morning, I offered him a swig of my bottle of wine, he declined. #coolstorybro

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:08 (eleven years ago) link

cope's only real dickhead move was alienating thighpaulsandra, an artist of perhaps even greater genius than himself

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:08 (eleven years ago) link

I'm no springsteen fan but I am a HUGE suicide fan and I will admit his cover of "dream baby dream" is fantastic and I like it as much if not more than the original

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:09 (eleven years ago) link

I like Cope in general, btw. Just thinks he gets overhyped, and overhypes himself.

emil.y, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:09 (eleven years ago) link

Bless his cotton socks.

emil.y, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:09 (eleven years ago) link

TS: the artless drywank of ELP vs the spiritual airbrushing of Yes vs the formica-mantras of DSOTM-era floyd

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:10 (eleven years ago) link


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