Karl Hector & The Malcouns, Non Ex Orbis

https://www.injerah.com/web/image/product.template/2192/image_1920?unique=e7605bc
(0 avis)

BIS => 2024 04 05
1LP - NOW-AGAIN
2019 => 2024

30,00 € 30.0 EUR 30,00 € hors TVA

30,00 € hors TVA

Not Available For Sale

  • Statut
  • Label
  • Genre
  • Genre
  • Genre
  • Format
  • Date de parution
  • Date de la réedition

Cette combinaison n'existe pas.

Statut: BACK IN STOCK
Label: NOW-AGAIN RECORDS
Genre: JAZZ, FUNK, ROCK / PSYCHE / FOLK
Format: 1 LP
Date de parution: 2019
Date de la réedition: 2024

TRACKLIST 


A1 Non Ex Orbis


A2 Crawling Through Your Mind


A3 Hymnin5 (Extended)


A4 Stossgebet


B1 Asteroid


B2 Inhale / Exhale


B3 Mother Seletta


B4 Dekagon




DESCRIPTION


Kraut-jazz-rock produced by JJ Whitefield (Poets of Rhythm/Whitefield Brothers). The long-standing band’s third album. Featuring Marja Burchard (Embryo).


We look to Middle Eastern funk and psychedelic fusions, and to various ethnic records for sound and phrasing," says the group’s JJ Whitefield. "We’re trying to combine the global experimentalism of Krautrock with the backbeat of funk."Non Ex Orbis, the band’s third studio album, digs deeper into the Krautrock history embedded deep in the soil of their native Munch - three of the most influential bands of the1970s experimental German rock scene sprung from there: Amon Duul, Popol Vuh and Embryo.Influenced by these musical heroes, Whitefield shapes a sound that takes the experimental approach ofthe classic Krautrock era and slides between beat-heavy drone and spacey, prog-rock suites. Marja Burchard, daughter of Embryo mastermind Christian Burchard, fronts the group on keyboard,vibraphone and other-worldly vocals. Al Markovic joins longstanding Malcoun Zdenko Curilija to round out the ensemble.Non Ex Orbis, read by Whitefield and the band as Out Of This World, symbolizes an innocent way of composing and improvising music, free from the influences of our contemporary environment, preserving a childlike way of hearing sounds in their unfiltered purity."Some will classify this as a retro, but for the band it simply is a form of creating, Whitefield states."We’re drawing from an established musical vocabulary which was popular at a time in Germany,when underground musical culture had its creative peak.