Amon Düül II (Utopia) ‎– Utopia (Reissue, Bonus Tracks Remastered) (1973/2000)

  • 20 Feb, 21:24
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Artist:
Title: Utopia
Year Of Release: 1973/2000
Label: Gammarock Records
Genre: Krautrock, Prog Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:04:49
Total Size: 172/419 Mb (scans)
WebSite:

Amon Düül II (Utopia) ‎– Utopia (Reissue, Bonus Tracks Remastered) (1973/2000)


Tracklist:

01. What You Gonna Do?
02. The WolfMan Jack Show
03. Alice (O.P.)
04. Las Vegas (O.P.)
05. Deutsch Nepal
06. Utopia No. 1
07. Nasi Goreng
08. Jazz Kiste (1)
09. Surrounded By The Stars
10. Dancing On Fire
11. Deutsch Nepal

Bonus Tracks:
12. Goldrush
13. Star Eyed
14. Dr. Stein

Line-up::
Lothar Meid (vocals, bass, mellotron)
Joe Nay (guitar)
Olaf Kübler (saxophone, flute, moog, gong)
Kristian Schultze (keyboards)
Jimmy Jackson (organ, piano, marimba)
Renate Knaup (vocals)
Chris Karrer (violin, soprano sax)
John Weinzierl (guitar)
Rolf Zacher (voice)
Falk Rogner (organ)

The first track "What You Gonna Do" is a straight-ahead rocker, with Renate Knaup singing, always nice to hear her distinctive voice. "WolfMan Jack Show" is a weird song, with Jimmy Jackson at the mysterious 'Choir organ' (giving off a stranger sound than mellotron choirs), which he actually utilised on many tracks to good effect. The bass riff here is almost snatched straight from Beatlers' "Come Together", played German style. "Alice" is a sweet love song. The tune itself is care-free and up-lifting, and has Lothar playing mellotron flutes. "Las Vegas" is a hippy-sounding jam with congas, jazzy sax playing and a nose-flute. "Deutsch Nepal" is a re-make of the song of the same name from "Wolf City". It's heavy sound and strange 'vocal' from guest Rolf Zacher makes it an excellent example of Krautrock. "Utopiat No.1" is another hippy jam (strikingly similar to "Las Vegas") but features those searing organs from Jimmy Jackson and Falk Rogner too, Olaf Kubler toying around with a moog synth, and bizarre echoed vocals from Meid. "Nasi Goreng' is a hammond-heavy instrumental with strong melodies, and light oriental moments (of course, with a title like that). The album finishes up with "Jazz-Kiste", probably the master-piece composition of the album - starring Passport's Christian Schulze on electric-piano and Embryo's Edgar Hoffman playing amazing 'wah-wah' soprano sax almost throughout.



  • mufty77
  •  14:38
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Many thanks for lossless.
  • GalacticKat
  •  09:13
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Many thanks for the lossless Krautrock!