Faust - Fresh Air (2017)
Artist: Faust
Title: Fresh Air
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Bureau B
Genre: Krautrock, Psychedelic, Experimental
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 52:04
Total Size: 304 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Fresh Air
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Bureau B
Genre: Krautrock, Psychedelic, Experimental
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 52:04
Total Size: 304 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Fresh Air 17:30
02. Birds of Texas 02:30
03. Partitur 00:22
04. La poulie 06:37
05. Chlorophyl 08:04
06. Lights Flicker 05:39
07. Fish 11:22
Faust has recorded a new album. It is entitled "Fresh Air" and differs in several respects from its predecessor "Just Us", from the year 2014. At the time, the recordings were made at Peron's rehearsal studio in Schiphorst in northern Germany, hypnotic pieces with the kind of noisemaking the band is known for. For the new album, Peron and Diermaier were looking for communication with musician friends and the audience. The tracks were recorded in changing ensembles at changing locations in the USA (during a 28-day tour in March/April 2016). In these community recordings, with friendly support from Peron's database of field recordings, a strongly shaded noise music emerged which extends its feelers to the remotest corners of the here and now. Droning, swinging, lusting for freedom, here and there holding out quite stoically as machine-room blues. Or just phonetically - along the geometry. On board are the freely fabulous Barbara Manning in a live lecture, Jürgen Engler (Die Krupps) in overdub and Ysanne Spevack as a wonderful wavemaker on the viola. The seven and a half minute title track, which faUSt deliberately placed at the beginning of the album ("so you can enjoy it for a long time," says Zappi Diermaier), begins with the poem by a French school friend of Peron (translated and recited in Polish) and ends in an industrial sound inferno. The singer cries for "Fresh Air" as if it is being taken away from him. Jean-Herve Peron offers a political reading: "Can you breathe calmly here, or are we being poisoned?" "Engajouez vous!" Peron presents this franco-faUStian artificial word to the audience and rewrites the Marseillaise for the here and now in the track "Chlorophyl": "Allons enfants de l'Anarchie, notre jour de jouir est arrive". The call results from wild horror at a collapsing world: "Artists, engage through your songs, L'art pour l'art is finished." Peron quotes with his voice, above the polyphonic undergrowth that colleague Zappi so nimbly unleashes, and Barbara Manning sneaks word sketches from her bag of tricks into the hymn. And finally, Zappi has his mini-dada performance with "Schnobs" and "Bia": a small dialect-based text piece, which starts with Chlorophyl, goes over the meadow past the cow and lands with the farmer who drinks a beer and a schnapps and suddenly sees two cows. "Is it from the chlorophyl?" Good question, but no answer comes. At the last moment, these texts also want to join in the shuffle. The words and music and noise fall together continuously, sometimes a track is created completely from the free interplay of the forces that emerge when the musicians in the session approach each other. "Enlightened dilettantism" is the term used by faUSt. The story of the band can tell that tale nicely. As Krautrockers, Faust (as the name was written before they later reformed) had a worldwide career. On their first three albums in the early 1970s, they inhabited the vast field from improvisation to bricolage to rock'n'roll with the ease of rogues and the determination of declared sonic renegades. They were big in Britain before the notion of Krautrock had made the rounds in Germany. One can still feel the breathing of this music, the bubbling of this primal soup, in current faUSt pieces, in the stone-age thudding of "Fish", which Faust anticipated in 1972 on "Mamie Is Blue". But you will also be able to distinguish the as-yet-unheard if you allow yourself enough audio time. The sound of a squeaky door from the house of Jean-Herve Peron, for which the musician has the same kind of enthusiasm others might reserve for a brilliant guitar riff ("gripping, touching"); or the minute-long fadeout of "Fish", which Zappi Diermaier is so excited about. The only plan is for the band to take off without a plan. "We let the music play through us," says Jean-Herve Peron. Everything else is up to the listener, to make his own film. Jean-Herve Peron has a little tip for us: Listen to the fish.
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Faust - Fresh Air FLAC.rar - 304.0 MB
Faust - Fresh Air FLAC.rar - 304.0 MB