Ownership: 1978 M.F.S. / Music Farm Studios (LP). Gatefold.
7/19/10 (review); 9/28/18; 3/27/26 (update)
---1/21/11
Regular readers of the CDRWL know that I'm quite fond of the Berlin School of sequencer based electronic music. And that's where Bizarre Ko.Ko.Ko. fits in perfectly. In fact, this is version 2.0 of Cultural Noise, an LP from my collection that I fawned over way back when. This isn't that dissimilar from Cultural Noise, though it's clearly moving away from the Tangerine Dream influence, and adding an overall darker mood. Mellotron, sequencers, and guitar are all present, especially early on. It begins to deconstruct towards the end, making it sound more like an early Klaus Schulze effort (think Cyborg). Really a fine effort and a must hear for EM fans.
---3/16/26
That was the original CDRWL entry, penned after acquiring the LP. This is my first revisit since and I'll add it here to UMR.
One can't talk about Bizarre Ko.Ko.Ko. (would like to know the reasoning behind that moniker) without referencing Cultural Noise. And that's because they are 2/3rds of the same band. Looks like it was Gerhard Lisy who sat this one out. The crazy titles stayed in place as well, with 'Retracting The Reflected Consciousness Of All Having Come To Into Being' taking first prize. And look at that cover. What the hell were these guys into? Alien insanity, that's what. If curious, the cover was done by one of the two members of the band: Walter Heinisch. Clearly Hans Rudolf Giger was an influence here.
Musically these guys were still entrenched into the analog 70s. No hints of 1984 here. This isn't their "Poland" or "Drive Inn" album, that's for sure. Some very inventive sequences can be heard, especially on B1. I referred to B2 as deconstruction, but there's plenty of sequencing there too.
Ownership: 1984 Synoptik (LP). Acquired in 2011.
No CD reissues as of 3/16/26. Has been reissued on LP.
1/21/11 (review); 3/16/26 (update / new entry)
---2004
This album didn't meet my expectations as they were set to believe a Magma, King Crimson, and Gentle Giant combination. Naturally I took that to mean Mekanik meets Red meets Power & The Glory. But it could also mean Uppsala meets Discipline (still don’t hear any Gentle Giant I’m afraid). Modern sounding, very jazzy in the piano, digital-80’s style synths, clean and distorted guitar runs. Their sound sometimes reminds me of the new French group Nil, but in a different genre altogether. Expectations are funny, but now that I have my head around this, I’m enjoying it a lot more. Jazzy Zeuhl with Crimson moves. Something very different than anything else overall.2004 (review); 6/20/17; 3/16/26 (update)
Gargantua went on to release one more album which I've yet to hear.
3/16/26 (new entry)
My only encounter with Manfredo Fest prior was the hyper obscure EP that I - more or less - rediscovered about seven years ago. Dutifully added it to Discogs, and some economics flunkie sold it for $15. When the next $1000+ copy moves, I'm sure he'll feel smart. Which is why I stopped adding things to Discogs. Too many slow brains out there to trust with these sort of rarities. Triggers me. If only Carolina Soul had a copy first. Here's my review of that EP, and my experience with it, and how it started my Unknown Vinyl Records blog (which I've fallen terribly behind on, and I have so much more to add there). Discogs shows an ownership of 2. The smart person that grabbed the $15 copy (I presume). And me. Those might be the only two copies left on the planet.
Which gets us to Brazilian Dorian Dream, which is by far the most known and popular of Fest's albums. I was sold on its contents in about - oh - 25 seconds. Starting off like every album that features The Northettes, Fest proceeds to bring out the Mini Moog and electric piano, the rhythms go on fire, and Roberta Davis provides the beautiful airy wordless vocals. It is about perfect, and it only gets better from there. Have to think that Sergio Mendes' Primal Roots had a role in the sound displayed here. Someone astutely compared this album to Cortex's Troupeau Bleu, where there are many similarities. Which recalled my own observation of Cortex reminding me some of Cos, taking us back to our Canterbury roots. This isn't a Canterbury album of course, but it has that feel-good optimistic sound, with brilliant songwriting. Perhaps had Fest added an electric guitar, or a flute, then Brazilian Dorian Dream would have gone to even a higher plane. I'm more than happy to be on the mountain he scaled as it is.
Ownership: 2020 Far Out (CD). Booklet has only the original liner notes. Taken from vinyl but it does sound good. Acquired in 2026.
3/16/26 (review)
3/16/26 (new entry)
I'm largely ignorant of Michal Urbaniak's extensive canon of work, though I've been aware of him since I started crate digging in the middle 1980s. Some like-minded friends were into him, though I never pursued in earnest. I recall very little about his music that was played for me back then.
As I listen to Paratyphus B, I can understand why I probably didn't pursue. You really have to be in the mood for stuff like this. Released only in Germany on the Spiegelei label, you can hear the avant garde jazz of the era almost immediately. Urbaniak provides a very adventurous type of electric violin, miles away from the likes of Jean-Luc Ponty. On the final track he plays the saxophone in similar fashion. Future wife Urszula Dudziak is very much into scat singing, and she is at once energetic and atmospheric, occasionally at the same time. Electric piano also gets a workout. The three piece rhythm section rounds things out.
This title is a bit rough for my ears. The melodic jazz parts work really well in this setting, but it gets very noisy in places that I don't find pleasant or comforting. Not sure how this CD set will turn out. Depends on where I land with the other recordings. I don't mind owning music like this, as it provides a stark contrast, just not too much of it please. More to come.
Former ownership: 2023 Made in Germany (3xCD). Part of Sound Pieces. Tri-fold digipak with historical liner notes inside the digipak. Obviously mastered from vinyl (or a noisy tape). Acquired in 2026.
2/9/26 (review)
Also once owned: Body English
2/9/26 (new entry)
I was surprised to learn that I haven't covered a single Univers Zero album in UMR. I had really tired of the band in the last 20 years, and sold off all the later titles starting with Heatwave and ending with Clivages. But I kept their classic 2nd through 4th albums, of which this represents the middle. So might as well get started here, an album I haven't heard since the 90s I'd submit. If any of the other Univers Zero albums walk back in here, I can readdress them at that time.
It starts off in a hellish mode, chamber music for the 5th rung. I had forgotten that there was mellotron here, an instrument that I would never associate with the music of Univers Zero. Once the music settles down, the mood only goes darker. Game of Thrones styled classical music, 30 years before the fact. Definitely not an album to pick up ones' spirits (well, I know a couple of guys who do get excited at hearing this). This is sit down, take a deep breath, and lower the lights music. Just make sure there is some light.
I definitely appreciate the album more when they incorporate rock elements (especially on 'Combat'), though that certainly isn't their main premise. I'm not sure avant prog is really the right genre for Univers Zero. They've been shoehorned in for a lack of a better tag. When I was in my 20s, they were called RIO, but that was even more vague given that it was never meant to be a genre, but rather an attitude. Chamber rock isn't much better. Give them credit, Univers Zero is unique within the musical landscape.
Subscription copies came with an additional one sided 7 inch, that was later added to the CD reissues ('Triomphe Des Mouches'). It's similar to the shorter and darker tracks on the album proper with some martial percussion.
I'll probably never be the world's foremost Univers Zero fan, but I can appreciate greatly what they're doing. Variety is good for the collection. I'll probably hang onto these three, which I've had forever, and likely stop there. More to come.
Ownership: 1981 Recommended (LP). Acquired in 1992.
1992; 3/8/26 (review)
Also own and need to review: Heresie; Uzed; Crawling Wind
3/8/26 (new entry)
Weather Report - Heavy Weather. 1997 Columbia Legacy (CD) (1977). This is Weather Report's most known and best selling album, one that I never truly connected with. Of course all copies I've found prior were commodity LP pressings, and usually in VG condition, which can be distracting. The 69 cent bin comes through again with this wonderful looking CD. Let's see if my viewpoint changes. The album opens with their trademark hit song 'Birdland'. This is a song we played when I was a stage band performer in high school. I didn't like it much then, and honestly, I still don't. It's too... happy I think. Something about it. The title is a misnomer as well, nothing heavy about the album whatsoever. My understanding is that Weather Report did not like to be associated with the fusion crowd, and of the albums I've heard, I have to agree with them. On Heavy Weather, the music veers closer to ECM, and even smooth jazz territory. If requested to choose a favorite track, I'd go with B2 or B4. I have yet to encounter a Weather Report album I feel compelled to keep, including their earlier avant garde works. But I'll keep trying, as I'm up for revisiting some as well as there's a few I missed altogether. (3/7)
*Kenji Mori Quintet - Firebird. 2020 Craftman / Three Blind Mice (CD) (1977). I picked this reissue up a few years ago, and had a relatively high rating on it, though recall nothing about the contents. The album starts off like a psych work though quickly gets into some boppy sax. Not really my style. The second track is Nino Rota's 'Time For Us', a pretty track that Mori's flute gives the Lloyd McNeill treatment, if not too comfortable and predictable. This leads to the two part title composition. The rhythm lays down a deep groove while Kazumi Watanabe solos on the guitar and Mori responds on recorder and sax. Nothing particularly incendiary from either though. The second half gives us a sunnier tropical feel with similar solo results. A solid entry, not really kozmigroov, not pure jazz, not fusion, but elements of all the above. I think I rated it a bit high though. Probably won't keep for the long haul but OK for now. (3/2)
*Bjorn J:Son Lindh - Ramadan. 1971 Metronome Sweden (LP). It was only a couple of years ago I revisited Cous Cous from my collection and, while it was enjoyable on an easy listening level, decided to let it go. I bought Ramadan at the same time, and presumed that it would be similar. I hadn't heard the album since acquiring it 25 years ago. I was pleasantly surprised to learn that the two are very different. Ramadan is much more funky and even progressive at times. I've always enjoyed Lindh's flute work, and the key ingredient here is Kenny Hakansson on guitar. He of Kebnekaise fame. Unlike Janne Schaefer, Hakansson brings a psychedelic flair to the proceedings. Though I wish he had an opportunity to light it up more. Three of the eight tracks are more acoustic in nature and these are the middle eastern themed compositions. Otherwise it's a fine kozmigroov funky flute extravaganza. A bit surprised this album doesn't have that much cachet. It's relatively inexpensive despite never having been reissued on CD. Regardless, I'm definitely holding onto this. Features a nice gatefold cover as well. (2/25)
* - Keeping for the collection
Sepultura first came across my radar while still in college, and to my ears back then, they were just too primitive for me to get into. They were getting rave reviews in the metal mags at the time. I believe I first heard Morbid Visions (1986) which, even for fans, is some tough sledding. And that was really it for me and Sepultura. Which is too bad, because by the time of Beneath the Remains, we would have been on parallel paths for where we wanted thrash to go. I was deep into the Euro prog underground by then, and while still very much interested in proggy thrash, I guess I had already written off Sepultura. My loss.
Fast forward to 2017, and now I'm traveling down to Sao Paulo for business. In order to be on time at work Monday morning, it requires a late Saturday night flight from the US. Thus leaving Sunday afternoon open for strolling and a nice dinner. Fortunately my company allowed us to stay at ritzy hotels in safe, leafy neighborhoods. Like the Jardins. And what do people on Sunday do in Sao Paulo? They walk Avenida Paulista. There's many music acts you can catch for free while walking. Including metal. And there were at least three bands emulating Sepultura who were legend by that point. They were all fun to watch and got me into the mood to check some of their material out.
A couple of years later I ended up acquiring five titles on CD in a bulk buy, including the one I'm listening to now. I didn't write about it then, so Sepultura makes its UMR debut today. Beneath the Remains is on the heavier and darker side of the thrash genre, recalling the German groups Kreator and Destruction. The riffs are inventive and change quite a bit. While it's not really progressive in the traditional sense, the riffs are mixed up quite a bit to keep it interesting. Similar to Dark Angel in that way. The vocals are one step away from death metal, very angry and to the point. Not as powerful or accomplished as Tom Araya of Slayer, but we're in the same ballpark. Overall I think this is where I wanted to hear Exodus go, and they never did. Beneath the Remains is further proof that the late 80s were the golden era of thrash.
The first bonus track is a cover of a Mutantes song, done Sepultura style and sung in Portuguese, so there's something to ponder.
Ownership: 2007 Roadrunner (CD). Booklet with lyrics and historical liners. Acquired in 2019.
11/23/19; 3/2/26 (review)
3/2/26 (new entry)
*Crosby, Stills & Nash. 1990 Atlantic (CD) (1969). The one CSN album I can listen to. Of course not having the reprehensible Neil Young on board helps with that. As for the other guys, well, they are (or were) knuckleheads, but not so insufferable. What makes this debut successful is it's a far cry from your typical protest hippy folk rock album. A1 and B1 bring in early progressive rock ideas. A3 is beautiful. B4 is another solid effort. 'Wooden Ships' really is something special, and one is left wishing CSN had pursued this trek more often. The Ides Of March version is even more stunning. I've owned this album in one form or fashion since college (usually on LP). Just picked up this CD for a buck at an estate sale, and checking it out again. Might as well keep this first edition US CD unless I luck into an audiophile CD or LP somewhere. It's been happening a lot lately for both formats, much to my happiness (note America review below as but one example). (3/2)
Dando Shaft - An Evening With. 1970 Decca (LP). Picked this one up at an estate sale smack dab in the middle of the pandemic (2020) in a mountain town northwest of here. A most famous sale for UMR as that's where I scored my original Eden Ahbez for cheap. This was a good door prize though. I didn't write about it then, so thought I'd check it out one more time as I'm likely to sell the LP at the next record show. Though I'm usually averse to folk music, and generally find English folk as puzzling to why it's so highly prized. Comus and Jan Dukes de Grey (Mice and Rats), oh yea, sign me up. But most English folk sounds, you know, like English folk. With that premise, I find Dando Shaft better than most, which is why I kept it for the last five plus years. B1 is particularly nice. A3 is hauntingly atmospheric. I can live without the silly A4, but otherwise it's an inoffensive English folk album. Not bad at all, but sticking to my premise of selling it. (2/24)
*America - America. 2013 Audio Fidelity (SACD) (1971). This was part of that incredible audiophile CD collection I acquired back in November. Almost all of it already sold, and most went quick. I held this one back for myself to revisit. Though I doubt I ever gave it a serious listen prior, and certainly not an audiophile copy. As noted here on a journal entry about five years ago, I really enjoy a handful of America's songs, but have never really embraced one of their albums. This debut features 'A Horse With No Name' (though not to be found on first press original LPs), one of the greatest folk rock songs ever written, and I never tire hearing of it when it comes across the speakers at any store I may be visiting. The other two known songs here are the formidable 'Sandman' and the decent 'I Need You'. Is there anything else here? Ah yes, plenty as it turns out. The opener is excellent, and 'Three Roses' would have been worth adding to the Greatest Hits album, though I don't think it ever received much airplay. A6 is another excellent song. The hidden great track here is saved for the next-to-last 'Donkey Jaw', proving that America could have had a swing through the underground had they so desired. I can pass on A4, B3, and B6, but the rest is very good to great. Keeping this one. (1/3)
* - Keeping for the collection
After the original insane lockdowns of the pandemic, the magnanimous government of Colorado "let us" have a bit of our freedom back. So glad we live in a free country. A teaser of the communism to come I guess. Hey, it wasn't safe. Ya-huh. In any case, as soon as I could go to estate sales and thrift shops, I did. With my stupid mask on.
I bring this up on the Spirit post, because for whatever reason, the first LPs I was finding right away were from them. Most not in the best shape. A year later (still under some sort of edict), I found the five CD Original Album Classics series, and I sold off the LPs, and that was the end of my initial Spirit exploration.
Except I didn't document any of those listens, beyond some brief notes for Clear. The exception to my Spirit renaissance was the first album, as I'd randomly picked up their CD some 15 years earlier. I'll start here and also review the others in the coming weeks.
I consider Spirit a highly unique band. They didn't rely on instrumental prowess, or any other crutch, to hide their inability to write a song. And that was their strength - an innate ability to craft melodies. And they were strong arrangers. So, yes, perhaps 'Taurus' being the most famous with a chord progression most known as 'Stairway to Heaven'. I'm one to give Zep a break here, as they most certainly fleshed it out much further, and only one central theme is familiar. Best guess it was a subconscious event rather than purposeful deceit. If one is to call out an instrumentalist, it most certainly would be the guitar of Randy California. And really love his acidic tone when employed.
There's elements of psych, jazz, and early prog concepts. The Beatles songcraft is also apparent at times. The exception to the tightly woven songs is the lengthy album closer 'Elijah" that shows the band were comfortable with instrumental jamming as well. Here, the flow recalls the Doors a bit. Or vice-versa.
The bonus tracks, on the other hand, seem to refute my claim about them being songwriters first, and jammers second. Really enjoy this side of Spirit as well. I hear these bonus tracks as essential to the overall experience.
2005 (first listen); 2/18/18; 1/27/26 (review)
Will be reviewing albums 3 through 5 in the coming weeks.
1/27/26 (new entry)
First Light (1978) ---7/19/10 First Light were a band from Australia with direct ties to the excellent progressive rock / AOR hybrid band ...