Octahedron [Double LP]The Mars Volta
Release Date: 09/05/2009
Original Release:
2009
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 1094810_VY
UPC # 613481019760
Label: Sargent House
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Performer: The Mars Volta
Distributor: Redeye Music Distribution Notes: For punk, metal or hard rock bands, the unplugged album is the one that shows whether they've been succeeding simply on energy and volume, or because of real talent. (Anyone who remained a skeptic of Kurt Cobain's songwriting skills must have been converted by Nirvana's MTV UNPLUGGED masterpiece.) And OCTAHEDRON, a quieter and more subdued Mars Volta album, proves that same fact for a band that's perpetually lived on a knife's edge of tension. Recorded in less than a month, OCTAHEDRON is by no means an unplugged album--it's not acoustic, it's not confined to ballads, and includes consecutive hard rockers in "Cotopaxi" and "Desperate Graves"--but it charts a different direction for the group, and proves they don't need to shuttle between dynamic extremes in order to succeed on an artistic level.
Rolling Stone (p.77) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[An] LP haunted by heartbreak and more focused on soulful vocal emoting than on cool time signatures and guitar flip-outs."
Spin (p.94) - "[O]n gorgeous psych-soul ballads like 'Copernicus' and 'Since We've Been Wrong,' these hardcore noise freaks show off a sensual streak, while fierce rockers such as 'Teflon' and 'Cotopaxi' burn with purpose..."
Alternative Press (p.111) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[T]he Mars Volta replace much of their plasma-ball energy to mine progressive-rock history with measured dynamics, vintage Mellotrons and Cedric Bixler-Zavala's cosmic lyricism in tow..."
Q (Magazine) (p.127) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[T]he stunning 'Halo Of Nembutals' is the closest Mars Volta have yet come to combining the hard-rocking bombast of Led Zeppelin with the bravura of Santana."
Paste (magazine) (p.59) - "Chock full of falsetto harmonies and lilting, distorted chord progressions, this is the group's quietest albums to date....A haunting album full of twilight poetry."
Pitchfork (Website) - "Slower, with fewer breakdowns or out-of-nowhere segues into a wholly new song, it's kind of a Cliff Notes of everything the band does well."
Though Omar Rodriguez-Lopez and Cedric Bixler Zavala did time in popular Emo band At The Drive-In, their subsequent project, the Mars Volta, is a horse of an entirely different color. Instead of punk, the pair takes their influences largely from 1970s prog rock and fusion. Extended, suite-like compositions and dizzying instrumental virtuosity are the order of the day, rather than adolescent angst and primitive pounding. Mars Volta's debut album, 2003's DE-LOUSED IN THE COMATORIUM announced the band's presence with a bang, setting a standard for post-emo ambitions in the mid-2000s.
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Influences:
Barrett, Syd Björk Boredoms Can Cobham, Billy Davis, Miles Hawkwind Hendrix, Jimi Jane's Addiction King Crimson Led Zeppelin Mahavishnu Orchestra Mr. Bungle Otis, Shuggie Pink Floyd Talk Talk Waits, Tom Williams, Tony (Drums) Yes Zappa, Frank
Similar Genres:
Experimental Rock |