Out of Focus (Germany) - 1970, 1971 [1990, 1991, Kuckuck Schallplatten]
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Out of Focus (Germany) - 1970, 1971 [1990, 1991, Kuckuck Schallplatten]
Artist: Out of Focus
Album: Out of Focus
Year: 1971
Label: Kuckuck Schallplatten, 1991
Style: Progressive Rock
Genre: Krautrock, Jazz Rock/Fusion
Format: Flac (separate) + Cue + Log + Scans
Size: 289 Mb + 17 Mb (Scans)
Source: My CD collection
Review by Sean Trane, progarchives.com
With an unchanged line-up, OOF focus progressed immensely from their psyched-out prog rock by adding a jazz dimension that will make itself present through Moran's newly developed sax playing. This added dimension will give OOF such a wider spectrum that their excellent debut album will be dwarfed by this monster follow-up. Strangely enough their jazzy impulses show in the Tull (This Was) or TYA (Ten Years After) mode, rather than a complete jazz-rock ala Mahavishnu or brassy rock ala Colosseum or Warm Dust. Charged with an awesome abstract artwork, this baby is again released with the now-legendary Kuckuck label.
The album starts energetically enough with the hard driving What Can a Poor Boy do, but where you expect a flute, Moran pulls out his new sax and blows one mean solo, having us wonder how he mastered it so easily so quickly. Indeed, even in the short stop and go section, he follows no problems and has enough guts to follow it with a last bravado before Wisheu's bass intervention change into a call and response between Drechsler's guitar first, than alternatively organ, sax and guitar before resuming the 100 mph rock driving rhythm. What a minor tour de force!! The absolutely delightful folk-laden (induced by a spellbinding guitar but also an enchanting flute) It's Your Life is an incredible joy to your eardrums, somehow reminding of Traffic's John Barleycorn. The 13-min+ slow-developing Whispering is a combination of explosion of sounds, from a propelling organ and discreet piano, a soaring & searing guitar, an very explorative bass, wild drumming and Moran's new saxophone madness. Again the jazz tonalities are really more in the TYA mode than the pure jazz-rock deal, but the whole thing is damn progressive and once again the band show their impressive talent at light improvisation and the tail end fade out is a pure bit of heaven.
Then flipside starts on the folky Blue Sunday Morning, starting on a mad drum march with a flute-and-organ unison and Moran's sinister voice being the master of ceremony. Behind all this, Drechsler's near satanic guitar arpeggios are what makes the track so spellbinding. The bass picks up late in the track and by that time the song has veered completely psychedelic and the tension is really palpable in the building crescendo leading to the surprisingly absent climax. Nevertheless, another minor tour de force. The next track is a linked up duo starting with Fly Bird Fly and a very Traffic-like flute leading to some superb Greenslade-like organ parts and sweet guitar lines slowly leading into the second part of track Television Program, which is plenty excellent as well and comes the album's apex with the depicting the boredom of the truckload of images breaking the floodgates from the cathode tube into your brains and wondering on the consequences. This last part can be reminiscent of their debut Wake Up album.
This band is a mystery on how they never made it big and they would have, had they been British or American. An absolute find, a must -hear, your musical education cannot be complete without having heard this group (I am slightly exaggerating on the last point but it is for the CAUSE), your life will definitely more complete and fulfilled if you know of them, your sexual impulses will be multiplied by a thousand if you have at least heard of them, you will live to 200 years of age if you are even aware of their existence - I've never been so serious in my life. LISTEN TO THIS, you progheads!!!!!!!!!!
Line-up / Musicians:
Remingius Drechsler - guitars, stylophone, tenor saxophone, flutes, voice
Hennes Hering - organ, piano
Moran Neumüller - soprano saxophone, vocals
Klaus Spöri - drums
Stephen Wishen - bass
Songs / Tracks Listing:
1. What Can a Poor Boy Do (5:52)
2. It's Your Life (4:31)
3. Whispering (13:34)
4. Blue Sunday Morning (8:20)
5. Fly Bird Fly (5:09)
6. Television Program (11:45)
Total Time: 49:11
Links:
ENJOY!
Последний раз редактировалось: fovit (Чт Сен 02, 2010 5:25 am), всего редактировалось 3 раз(а)
fovit- Сообщения : 583
Дата регистрации : 2009-05-05
Откуда : Алчевск, Украина
Re: Out of Focus (Germany) - 1970, 1971 [1990, 1991, Kuckuck Schallplatten]
Охохо... Когда же я придушу жабу и куплю этот альбом?....
Всё-таки любимый.....
Всё-таки любимый.....
Out of Focus - Wake Up! 1970 [1990, Kuckuck Schallplatten]
Artist: Out of Focus
Album: Wake Up!
Year: 1970
Label: Kuckuck Schallplatten, 1990
Style: Progressive Rock
Genre: Krautrock, Jazz Rock/Fusion
Format: Flac (separate) + Cue + Log + Scans
Size: 270 Mb + 10 Mb (Scans)
Source: My CD collection
Review by Sean Trane, progarchives.com
If you ever read Asbjornssen's Cosmic Dreams at Play, you will know how high esteem he holds this band. His article finishes this way: WHAT AN AWESOME GROUP THEY WERE! I cannot say it any better as the three albums they made in their prime were all drastically different from each other yet so unmistakably OOF (much like Floyd did all of their albums so different, yet all so FLOYD). Their music is absolutely theirs and sound like nothing else and although they are Germans, I hesitate to call it Krautrock or as some call it Krautjazz. They develop a strange mix of psyched-out rock with a good sense of jazz rock (although not quite as much in this debut album), add a good dose of flute/sax dominated prog rock and give themselves a maximum space for instrumental interplay even if Moran's voice holds an important role (and is an acquired taste in the same way that Peter Hammill or Roger Chapman are an acquired taste) with some non-sensical lyrics laying out their hippy ideals. With an abstract artwork this debut album (released on the legendary Kuckuck label) is aptly named Wake Up, even if the goal is to send you into dreamy trip, the music is raw, just the way the Germans liked it, reminiscent of their crosstown colleagues of Amon Duul II.
Right from the first repetitive note of Drechsler's guitar, soon underlined by Herring's organ and Moran Neumuller's flute, in the opening White Negro, you just know you're flying in a wonderful universe where time seems to be a very random dimension and the dreamy soundscapes are an invitation to tripping around the universe. The tougher-sounding God Save The Queen is more of rougher guitar-lead early 70's UK proto-prog ala EBB or BechKendel, but the middle section (recorded a bit too low) shared between the folky flute and the organ is a great counter-point using the full dynamics contrasting with the return of the opening section. Hey John is an almost 10-min wild flute-lead jam that can sound like Deep Purple's Mandrake Root in the middle.
The flipside jumps at your throat with the short but powerful No Name track that could easily be called You're Wasting Time, and even if there are obvious flaws in recording levels, this track is most likely to also claim the album's title, Wake Up! World's end is a fairly doomy track that still trails a bit of 60's into it, sometimes reminding of Floyd (Herring's organ and Spori's drumming sound like early Floyd circa Saucerful Of Secrets), while Moran's flute is more reminiscent of Traffic's Chris Wood and the guitar reminding us a bit of Krieger in The Doors' epic track The End. Ending the album is the lengthy Dark Darker track, which is a bit disjointed in its psyched-out moods especially Moran's flute racing up and down the ladder of sanity. This is one track where the group shows an excellent aptitude at light improvisation that lead to wild jamming, a thing that we would see much more of in the next three albums. Again the raw sound gives the impression that this record could've easily been recorded live in the Anglo-Saxon world, with only the approximate accent of Moran giving a hint otherwise. The closing section is a hard-driving Atomic Rooster-like heavy prog.
As with most German band singing in English, the vocals are not perfect but this is very minor as the texts (lyrics) are easily understood and are of a very social/political nature that they could also be classified in German only category Polit-rock (never thought you'd read about such a category, Uh? ;-) This IMHO only adds to the quality of the music and does not make it dated just for that reason. Technically absolutely brilliant (D-E A + HCH). Just by the weird song titles, one can see that this band is heavy, I mean HHHEEEAAAVVVYYY, man!!
Line-up / Musicians:
Remigius Drechsler - guitar
Hennes Hering - keyboards
Moran Neumüller - vocals, saxes
Klaus Spöri - drums
Stefan Wisheu - bass
Songs / Tracks Listing:
1. See how a white negro flies (5:48)
2. God saved the queen, cried Jesus (7:28)
3. Hey John (9:35)
4. No name (3:06)
5. World's end (9:55)
6. Dark, darker (11:37)
Total Time: 47:29
Links:
ENJOY!
Последний раз редактировалось: fovit (Чт Сен 02, 2010 5:28 am), всего редактировалось 1 раз(а)
fovit- Сообщения : 583
Дата регистрации : 2009-05-05
Откуда : Алчевск, Украина
Re: Out of Focus (Germany) - 1970, 1971 [1990, 1991, Kuckuck Schallplatten]
А я их не различаю, разве что во втором духовые добавились, в смысле медные...
Последний раз редактировалось: fovit (Вс Июл 12, 2009 4:08 am), всего редактировалось 1 раз(а)
fovit- Сообщения : 583
Дата регистрации : 2009-05-05
Откуда : Алчевск, Украина
Re: Out of Focus (Germany) - 1970, 1971 [1990, 1991, Kuckuck Schallplatten]
Спасибо, Олег!! С удовольствием обновлю
olaf_alien- Сообщения : 817
Дата регистрации : 2009-05-05
Откуда : Страна дураков
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